I have not flushed my water heater since we bought the house 3 years ago. I am quite confident it had not been flushed for at least 5 years prior given the understanding I have of the circumstances, and if I had to guess, it likely was never flushed for the life of the water heater. If the 4 digits of the serial number are an indication, it is 19 years old. It's a natural gas, 50 gallon water heater.
I haven't flushed it because I've read that flushing a water heater after a long period of not doing so can lead to problems (failure of unit, leaks, etc.). Is that actually valid, or an old wives tale?
Reason I'm curious now is that our water heat became sporadic several weeks ago - not that we are running out of hot water fast, but the temperature at full hot was cool to warm sometimes, and hot (the appropriate temperature) other times. At this point, the water is almost never appropriately hot, and pretty much always warm, and I've already turned up the temperature dial a bit on the water heater(with no consequence). So the easiest thing is that sediment is making the heating element(s) ineffective, but I'm gun shy since I've heard that doing a drain under the circumstances may lead to more trouble.
Appreciate any input.
I haven't flushed it because I've read that flushing a water heater after a long period of not doing so can lead to problems (failure of unit, leaks, etc.). Is that actually valid, or an old wives tale?
Reason I'm curious now is that our water heat became sporadic several weeks ago - not that we are running out of hot water fast, but the temperature at full hot was cool to warm sometimes, and hot (the appropriate temperature) other times. At this point, the water is almost never appropriately hot, and pretty much always warm, and I've already turned up the temperature dial a bit on the water heater(with no consequence). So the easiest thing is that sediment is making the heating element(s) ineffective, but I'm gun shy since I've heard that doing a drain under the circumstances may lead to more trouble.
Appreciate any input.