Do you have to go to Home Depot to replace your water heater?

Do you have to go to Home Depot to replace your water heater?

If you choose to replace your water heater instead, we’ll apply the cost of your diagnostic visit toward the purchase of your water heater. To extend your hot water heater’s labor warranty, sign up for The Home Depot’s Purchase Protection Plan.

How much does a new water heater cost?

You don’t have to worry about maintenance or replacement. When you buy you’re on the hook for any issues that arise after the warranty expires. The heaters cost between $800 to $1,200 depending on the size, plus $300 to $400 to have them installed.

What happens if you have two immersion heaters?

In case one of the immersion heaters malfunctions, the other one will still try to overcome that loss and heat the water. Since one heater is not enough to warm up all of the water in the cylinder, the resulting water flowing from your hot water tap will be lukewarm. This is one of the most common water heater issues that is hardly exposed.

How much does a tankless water heater cost?

Tankless heaters cost about $1,000 to $3,000. Water heaters cost $300 to $2,000+ for the unit alone while plumber labor runs $45 to $150 per hour. The length of the job averages 2 to 3 hours. Whether replacing or installing a water heater, we’ll go over all the costs you’ll run into.

How old is the water heater in a condo?

Each building has a basement, and each condo has its own Hot Water Heater in the common basement room, along with the 4 individual Hot Air GAS Furnace. Some hot water heaters have already been replaced, as the condos are 14 years old. Your comments please.

Can a single tankless water heater be used in a condo?

TOM: Not necessarily, Leslie. It depends on the size. Now, you would have to have it sized correctly by the plumber that installed it but it might be that a single tankless could do it or there could be a series of two or three tankless that are hooked up together side-by-side that work together.

Why does it take so long to get hot water in a condo?

MARILYN: But here’s an issue because I’ve been in some condos where they had them in individual units and one person I know had it retrofitted and it’s on the third story and it takes forever to get hot water in her kitchen downstairs. And we have a pump, a circulating pump, that keeps hot water going for a good portion of the day.

Is it good to have a hot water heater in a building?

The idea that you’re circulating a hot water loop throughout the whole building is wasting an enormous amount of energy, an enormous amount.

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