Anode rod aluminum vs. magnesium
is there any difference in an aluminum or magnesium anode rod when installed in a natural gas water heater? In other words is one better than the other? Specially when installed on city water supply, not a well.
The reason I ask is that our local supply house is running low on heaters that have magnesium rods, but have plenty that have aluminum anode rods. I would consider the water quality to be fairly good from our local utility.
Thanks to all
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one isn’t better then the other, it’s a matter of your water quality and what’s better for the specific situation. Also like the above comment if you have rotten egg smelling water then 100% replace it to aluminum
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Hi, If you promise never to cook with or drink the hot water, and always rinse it from the faucet before using cold water, than it might be okay. Aluminum is a neurotoxin and I'd always remove those rods and replace with magnesium when servicing water heaters. There is an old document written by a doctor in the archives here, which goes into much more detail.
Yours, Larry
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Isn't that the same thing as cooking in aluminum pans?
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Was it a Bradford White? They were having a problem with their anodes and were replacing them for free for a while.
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Hi @EBEBRATT-Ed , Yes it is. It's one of the things that doctor from long ago was worried about. Here's the link. Here are two links discussing aluminum and neurotoxicity: and https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s43440-022-00353-4
They are from 2022 and 2025.
Yours, Larry
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Hi, I may be a little over the top, but when it comes to health, it's guilty until proven innocent. I could not knowingly leave a client with something that ultimately could hurt them, even if it's not fully proven right now. Reading the document in the archives here from 1932 makes it quite clear there are multiple health risks associated with aluminum and its oxides. The modern studies confirm this. Dementia cases are on the rise. I don't want to risk contributing to it in any way. Guess you can tell I feel somewhat strongly about this "do no harm" thing.
Yours, Larry
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Yes, I believe the water heater that I swapped out a mag. anode and put in an aluminum was a Brad White electric. I will contact the owner/user and tell them NOT TO INGEST or use for cooking/drinking their HOT WATER. I don't believe folks generally do anyway. Thanks for that reminder Larry Weingarten. Owner claims that the swap was very effective for clearing up the "sulfury" smell. Almost immediate.
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As long as you make sure the power supply that was built by a 3rd party where cost was the only design criteria is still working and someone that doesn't understand it doesn't unplug it.
You get 100x more or more aluminum from eating some vegetables as you get from the tiny amount that dissolves from the anode in the water heater or an aluminum pot.
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I forgot all about plug-in electric anode. That probably would have worked too. Thanks hot_rod.
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Seem to remember a permanent graphite protector that used a battery. Nine volt?
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I've seen those, but never used one. How do they work?
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I have only installed a powered anode rod once, and it worked as intended (stopped the hot water from smelling bad). The powered anodes are quite a bit more expensive, but you only do it once.
Aluminum vs Magnesium Anode Rods: Which is Best for Your Water Heater?
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