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Guru
Pv=nrT
Pressure x volume =(some fixed number) Temperature
In other words when you heat up water it expands. Hence the pressure rise. But you can’t really ‘stop’ the expansion as the physical force of the pressure exerted by the temperature rise is really high. So instead of your water heater and all your hot water pipes springing leaks, a little bit of water weeps out the pressure relief valve to stave off that massive pressure build up. The pressure relief valve is doing it’s job. It weeps then it stops until the next cold/hot cycle. Most boats have an accumulator tank that could absorb that expansion. However in marine plumbing I often see a one way check valve on the cold water supply to the water heater which prevents the accumulator tank from absorbing that half a teaspoon of water that needs to be bled off from the temperature rise. So if your not into removing that check valve or you don’t have an accumulator tank (AKA expansion tank), you next option is to install an expansion tank between the cold supply and the water heater. You’ll need to set the pressure in the tank on the air side with a regular bicycle pump to whatever pressure your domestic pump puts out less 10 to 25 percent. (If your pump puts out 50 psi, set your expansion tank pressure to 35 to 40 psi.) That will fix your weeping pressure relief valve.
Regardless, I didn’t like my relief valve weeping at first either, but mine is directed overboard so I just got used to it. Besides the mechanical space in my boat is crowded enough and expansion tanks fail too. YMMV
Pressure x volume =(some fixed number) Temperature
In other words when you heat up water it expands. Hence the pressure rise. But you can’t really ‘stop’ the expansion as the physical force of the pressure exerted by the temperature rise is really high. So instead of your water heater and all your hot water pipes springing leaks, a little bit of water weeps out the pressure relief valve to stave off that massive pressure build up. The pressure relief valve is doing it’s job. It weeps then it stops until the next cold/hot cycle. Most boats have an accumulator tank that could absorb that expansion. However in marine plumbing I often see a one way check valve on the cold water supply to the water heater which prevents the accumulator tank from absorbing that half a teaspoon of water that needs to be bled off from the temperature rise. So if your not into removing that check valve or you don’t have an accumulator tank (AKA expansion tank), you next option is to install an expansion tank between the cold supply and the water heater. You’ll need to set the pressure in the tank on the air side with a regular bicycle pump to whatever pressure your domestic pump puts out less 10 to 25 percent. (If your pump puts out 50 psi, set your expansion tank pressure to 35 to 40 psi.) That will fix your weeping pressure relief valve.
Regardless, I didn’t like my relief valve weeping at first either, but mine is directed overboard so I just got used to it. Besides the mechanical space in my boat is crowded enough and expansion tanks fail too. YMMV
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