What’s more disappointing and demoralizing than getting in the shower in the morning, only to discover that there’s no hot water because your water heater isn’t working right? Showering in cold water is a miserable experience, and chances are you don’t have time to heat up water on the stove for a sponge bath.
Before you call a service technician in to look at your faulty water heater, it’s worth taking a look at it yourself. You may be able to get your water heater working again. If it’s a gas heater, the pilot light may have gone out. If it’s an electric water heater, it may have tripped a breaker. Both of these problems may be simple enough to fix on your own.
1. Troubleshooting Your Electric Water Heater
If you have an electric water heater and it’s not getting hot, the first thing you should check is the circuit breaker. A tripped circuit can cause your electric water heater to stop heating water.
If the circuit breaker isn’t tripped, then turn off the power to the system’s unit at the circuit breaker and use a non-contact voltage tester to test all of the wires in the water heater, to make sure they’re not getting power. Only when the appliance isn’t getting any power is it safe to work on.
If your electric water heater isn’t producing hot water and it hasn’t tripped a breaker, then it might have tripped a limit switch, or you might be looking at a failed heating element. Remove the upper heating element’s access panel and then take off the plastic safety guard and insulation. Be careful; you don’t want to touch any electrical terminals or wires. If you open up the access panel and find fiberglass insulation, wear safety goggles and gloves to handle it.
The high-temperature cut-off reset button is the red button just above the upper thermostat. Press it, and then replace the insulation, safety guard, and access panel. Flip the breaker back on. If your electric water heater still isn’t getting hot, you’ll probably have to get one or more heating elements replaced.