1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a water heater sediment drain system. The invention also relates to a method for draining sediment from a water heater.
2. Description of the Related Art
In water heaters, heat and stasis cause dissolved minerals and other suspended particulates to settle out and collect in the bottom of the tank. This sediment coats the interior of the tank, layering a slime and scale on the thermostat, heating elements and tank lining, decreasing the heater's efficiency and service life. Occasionally, globs of the slimy sediment are seen in hot drinks, cooking dishes and bath water.
The two existing methods of sediment removal are either ineffective and contaminating or inconvenient and very difficult to perform.
The first existing method is a prior art dip tub with a horizontal element having out-flowing jets for intentionally creating turbulence to circulate and mix the sediment with the outgoing heated water. That dip tube is not only ineffective at sediment removal but decreases water heater efficiency by defeating the very purpose for having the dip tube, that is the introduction of cold water at the bottom of the tank, so as not to disturb the hot water above. The intentional admixing of hot with cold prematurely reduces the temperature of the outgoing hot water, contaminates the entire tank with gooey slime and spits out sediment particles just when the user wants hot “clean” water.
The second existing method of sediment removal is to drain the bottom dwelling sediment through a side mounted drain valve of the tank. That outlet is located too high and isolated at one side to be truly effective and is markedly difficult and inconvenient to use. The user must connect a garden hose to the drain valve, direct the distant end of the garden hose through a door or window to the outside and away from the house, open the valve to drain the tank, close the outlet valve, and removed and put-away the garden hose. That procedure should be done monthly but is so inconvenient and problematic as to be seldom “if ever” done. Apartment dwellers and businesses have little chance of performing that procedure and sediment contamination continues as the number one cause of decreasing efficiency, heater element failure and heater maintenance.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a water heater sediment drain system and method, which overcome the hereinafore-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known systems and methods of this general type and in which sediment removal and even sediment prevention is effective, convenient, and simple.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, in a hot water heater having a tank with a top and a bottom, a sediment drain system comprising a hot water outlet in vicinity of the top of the tank, and a sediment removal tube having a tube inlet opening in vicinity of the bottom of the tank and a tube outlet opening in vicinity of the top of the tank. A combined hot water and sediment outlet is connected to the hot water outlet and to the tube outlet opening for mixing and drawing off sediment and hot water together for a predetermined period of time from the vicinity of the top of the tank.
Thus, according to the invention, sediment is never permitted to accumulate at the bottom of the tank, because it is drained off for the first few seconds of use by a consumer opening a hot water tap anywhere in a home or business. By the time the water runs hot and the consumer begins to use it, the sediment is no longer being drained.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the tank has a side drain, and the sediment removal tube is disposed outside the tank and connected between the side drain and the combined hot water and sediment outlet. The tank has a bib, and a T-fitting is connected to the side drain, the bib and the tube inlet opening of the sediment removal tube. A drain extension tube, which is connected to the T-fitting at the side drain, has an inlet opening foot in vicinity of the bottom of the tank. This first embodiment of the invention permits an existing hot water heater to be retrofitted with the sediment removal tube disposed outside the tank, which is particularly cost-effective.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention, a three-way valve is connected to the hot water outlet and to the tube inlet opening of the sediment removal tube. The three-way valve has the combined hot water and sediment outlet. The three-way valve may be manually operated, spring operated or remotely electrically operated for initially draining sediment through the sediment removal tube for the predetermined period of time and then drawing off hot water from the hot water outlet, upon use by a consumer of a hot water tap connected to the combined hot water and sediment outlet. This makes it particularly easy to switch-over from sediment and hot water removal to hot water removal alone by merely switching the position of the valve.
In accordance with an added feature of the invention, the sediment removal tube is disposed inside the tank, a tube inlet opening foot is disposed in vicinity of the bottom of the tank and is connected to the tube inlet opening of the sediment removal tube, and a three-way outlet valve is connected to the tube outlet opening of the sediment removal tube and to the hot water outlet and has the sediment outlet. According to this second embodiment of the invention, the tank is produced with the sediment removal tube in the tank and the valve can once again easily switch from combined sediment and hot water removal to hot water removal alone.
In accordance with an additional feature of the invention, the hot water outlet passes through one opening in the top of the tank, the sediment removal tube is disposed inside the tank and passes through another opening in the top of the tank separated from the one opening, a tube inlet opening foot is disposed in vicinity of the bottom of the tank and is connected to the tube inlet opening of the sediment removal tube, and a three-way outlet valve is connected to the tube outlet opening of the sediment removal tube and to the hot water outlet and has the sediment outlet. In this third embodiment of the invention, the sediment removal tube is once again disposed inside the tank, but the hot water outlet is separate from the sediment removal tube.
In accordance with yet another feature of the invention, the hot water outlet is disposed coaxially with or is combined with the sediment removal tube in a fitting at the tube outlet opening of the sediment removal tube. This fourth embodiment uses one fitting leading to the valve for sediment and hot water supply.
In accordance with yet another feature of the invention, the tank bottom has a concave shape with a lowest point at which the tube inlet opening foot is disposed. This embodiment uses a tank which is itself constructed differently than conventional tanks, with a bottom that aids in collecting sediment for removal according to the invention.
In accordance with yet another feature of the invention, there is provided an external bottom drain tube to be connected to the three-way valve. This feature provides an alternative sediment removal device downstream of the valve.
With the objects of the invention in view, there is also provided a method for draining sediment from a water heater. The method comprises providing a hot water heater having a tank with a top, a bottom and a hot water outlet in vicinity of the top of the tank, providing a sediment drain system including a sediment removal tube having a tube inlet opening in vicinity of the bottom of the tank and a tube outlet opening in vicinity of the top of the tank, and providing a combined hot water and sediment outlet connected to the hot water outlet and to the tube outlet opening. Sediment and hot water are mixed and drawn off together for a predetermined period of time from the vicinity of the top of the tank through the combined hot water and sediment outlet. This method is easily performed, ensures sediment removal, ensures water which is free of sediment when being used and increases the service life of the water heater.
In accordance with another mode of the invention, a three-way valve is connected to the hot water outlet and to the tube inlet opening of the sediment removal tube and has the combined hot water and sediment outlet. The three-way valve is operated for initially draining sediment through the sediment removal tube for the predetermined period of time and then drawing off hot water from the hot water outlet, upon use by a consumer of a hot water tap connected to the combined hot water and sediment outlet. The tap or faucet which initially removes sediment and hot water together can be located anywhere within any plumbing installation.
In accordance with a concomitant mode of the invention, the three-way valve operating step is performed automatically by spring operation or remote electrical operation of the three-way valve. The consumer therefore does not need to manually switch over the valve when sufficient sediment has been removed.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a water heater sediment drain system and method, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawings in detail and first, particularly, to
The hot water heater 1, which need not be electric, also employs a first embodiment of a sediment drain system 10 according to the invention. The sediment drain system 10 includes an external T-fitting 11 connected to the side drain 3 and having a bib 12. An external, permanent, side-mounted connection or sediment removal tube 14 has a tube inlet opening 14′ connected to the T-fitting 11 at the side drain 3 and a tube outlet opening 14″ connected to a three-way valve 15. The three-way valve 15 is also connected to the hot water outlet 4 and has a combined hot water and sediment outlet 16 to be connected to the regular building plumbing system and fixtures or taps. The first embodiment of the sediment drain system 10 utilizes the conventional side drain 3 because of its availability and readiness for retrofit of existing water heaters. The T-fitting 11, sediment removal tube 14 and three-way valve 15 may be constructed of metal or any other suitable material.
It may be seen by comparing
The integrated three-way valves 15, 25, 35 and 45 of
The user of the water heater may simply open any hot water tap, momentarily select the second or diverted position and finally close the hot water tap. This sediment drainage system is tool and implement free and takes less than one minute to operate. The use of a hot water tap provides an approved time and place, so that the contaminated water will not be used or consumed and controls the sediment and debris being flushed down the drain.
The three-way valve can be a manually-operated, spring-loaded, failsafe-return or electrically-driven valve, such as with a remote switch under a kitchen sink, or electrically controlled on a timed circuit to drain the sediment line for a few seconds during the initial flow of each hot water use (or predetermined number of hot water uses). This automated timed sediment removal system takes advantage of the natural pause as users wait for the water to run hot and totally eliminates the problem of sediment build up since microscopic amounts of particulate are flushed with each hot water use and sediment build up never occurs.