What actually goes in to moving a water heater.
Moving hot water heater from attic to garage.
This is far less expensive than your water heater leaking and causing thousands of dollars worth of water damage.
You can use an appliance dolly with a ratchet strap but first place.
It will eventually fail and probably leak.
Hot water pressure may decrease and the time it takes to get hot water to distance fixtures will rise quite a lot.
It s not as easy as just picking it up moving it and reconnecting it.
You want to do whatever you can to avoid heat loss even in nc.
The hot water breakers inside the unit need to be accessible and you need a drain pan and drain.
A water heater in the attic saves square footage tank type water heaters are big hulking cylinders filled with anywhere from forty to seventy gallons of hot water.
The problem here is health and safety.
Let s put the 40 gallon hot water tank overhead.
I ve written about how bad it is to put your heating and cooling system in an unconditioned attic especially in a cooling climate.
The previous location probably has the correct trunkline hot water plumbing.
Water heater i would say probably about 1000 1500 typically for this type of move depends a lot on how close existing cold and hot water lines and gas lines are to the garage because you can commonly tap in nearly anywhere on those lines don t necessarily have to come back to the closet with new lines from the heater to tap into the.
When moving a water heater it is imperative that you are gentle with it and that you move it in a horizontal position.
If you seal that off and make a new input in your garage you ll be supplying hot water to your whole house through a former branch line which is narrow.
Finally once the location is chosen it s all about moving the water heater this is the part that most people don t really think about.
The inspectors will approve it thus proving they re unqualified to inspect it at all.
When we started the job we noticed that the hot water heater was leaking so the hom.
It s obviously idiotic to put a water heater in the attic.
If the builder has already installed your water heater in the attic you can get it moved to another location in the house or into the garage.
There s one place though that s even worse.
Giant tanks of water happen to take up a lot of square footage and primarily for that reason many builders have opted to place water heaters in the attic of new homes.
Moving the water heater is an opportunity to either mess up on insulation longer lines poorly insulated with no check valve or to super insulate.
We had to go the extra mile for the county inspectors on this little job.
Another option is to choose a tankless water heaterto be installed in your attic.
Garage air getting into the home can lead.