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Old 03-08-2023, 12:06 PM   #1
Wildcatcreek
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Atwood Hot Water Heater

Out door drain. Drain plug is hard to get to, on, and off. Any suggestions to extend it add on Elbow pipe to bring end closer to front of water heater? tia.
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Old 03-08-2023, 12:11 PM   #2
chuckster57
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I use a 1/2 drive ratchet, short wobble extension and thin wall socket. Always start by hand.
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Old 03-08-2023, 01:36 PM   #3
sourdough
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I used the tool in the attachment to remove the plug on the last Atwood. I think you can even get them at some Walmarts. The location of the plug was behind a tube as I recall (been a few years) and it was difficult to get anything to it.

https://www.amazon.com/Camco-Water-H.../dp/B00BMRRZ94
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Old 03-08-2023, 01:42 PM   #4
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At home I use the same setup as Chuck. On the road, since I usually don't have "every tool in the cabinet", I use two "crescent wrenches"... One to fit on two flats on the drain plug and one to fit on the handle of that wrench to apply "loosening or tightening torque"....
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Old 03-08-2023, 02:32 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wildcatcreek View Post
Out door drain. Drain plug is hard to get to, on, and off. Any suggestions to extend it add on Elbow pipe to bring end closer to front of water heater? tia.
I experimented with a radiator petcock and found it to be too slow for drainage. Also, the copper to aluminum was a worry considering dissimilar metal corrosion. My current method is like Chuckster57's. Finding a fairly short socket is a plus. I use 7/8 inch nylon plugs, 3/8 drive ratchet and a short wobble extension.
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Old 03-08-2023, 02:50 PM   #6
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JRTJH,

Maybe the photos are a bit deceiving because of the angle in which they are taken, but it looks like a socket wrench with an extension would fit right in there. Or, is there not enough room for that because of the gas orifice?

Mine has the anode rod, the socket size is 1 1/16 inch. I keep this socket and ratchet exclusively, only for the water heater plug (anode). It servers no other purpose and it's tucked away inside the camper. It's one of the very few tools I keep in the camper that are dedicated for only 1 thing. I have another socket-ratchet set for everything else.





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Old 03-08-2023, 04:28 PM   #7
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David,

I believe your Montana High Country has a 12 gallon water heater....

There's significantly more room to maneuver a socket behind the burner tube on a 12 gallon water heater than there is on a 6 gallon size.....
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Old 03-08-2023, 04:40 PM   #8
sourdough
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Post #6 is of a 12 gal. Suburban water heater that looks just like mine. Anode rod/drain plug removal is much easier on the Suburban (straight shot) than the drain plug from the 6 gal. Atwood.
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Old 03-08-2023, 04:45 PM   #9
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Originally Posted by sourdough View Post
Post #6 is of a 12 gal. Suburban water heater that looks just like mine. Anode rod/drain plug removal is much easier on the Suburban (straight shot) than the drain plug from the 6 gal. Atwood.
... Or a 6 gallon Suburban.... There's a lot of "stuff" between the door and the anode/plug on the smaller Suburban, just like on the Atwood.
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Old 03-09-2023, 07:42 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JRTJH View Post
At home I use the same setup as Chuck. On the road, since I usually don't have "every tool in the cabinet", I use two "crescent wrenches"... One to fit on two flats on the drain plug and one to fit on the handle of that wrench to apply "loosening or tightening torque"....
That setup would worry me that if it slipped now I'm now replacing more than the rod. I keep an old 1/2" ratchet with a short extension and a $5 socket dedicated for this purpose.
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Old 03-09-2023, 08:19 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by Kirk's Keystone Outback. View Post
That setup would worry me that if it slipped now I'm now replacing more than the rod. I keep an old 1/2" ratchet with a short extension and a $5 socket dedicated for this purpose.
I've been removing anode rods this way for roughly 50 years and never had one "slip and damage anything... That said, if you feel comfortable with your procedure and tools, then there's no need to change the way you've been doing things.... My comments weren't, by any means, a "mandate to change" but rather an "alternate procedure that might help someone without having to go buy some special tools they might not have at home"....
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Old 03-16-2023, 10:49 AM   #12
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I use a socket and about 6 to 8 inch extension - works reasonably well
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