The 12yr warranty water heater is the same thing as the 6 year warranty. You're just paying extra for a longer warranty. It's all basically made with the same parts.
Chances are your 6 year warranty is gonna last at least 10 years unless you have incredibly corrosive water and/or you never drain the sediment out of it. No point in paying twice the price for the same thing.
There's not much that can fail in those things. The elements might go, but they are cheap and easy to replace (maybe $10/element and an hour of your time). The tank will start to leak eventually, but that should last 10+ years unless your water is really bad.
OP still has not specified if it's a NG or electric type heater. When I bought my GE from HD they had installation available for $200...huh? the dang WH only cost $220, I told them to load it in my hatchback and took it home. Them I bought a soldering kit $20, and bought some small pieces of copper pipe and cheap couplers to practice on, once I felt I had it down I installed the heater, had to raise the in and out lines for the new heater and sweated in new valves as well, I'd be dammed to pay a plumber $200 for a job he could do in 15 minutes.
$200 for installing a HWH is cheap, TBH.
My 50 gallon tank heater couldn't fill my huge soaker tub. The heater sprung a leak last year, and I didn't have enough height for a 75 gallon tank, so I just replaced it with a tankless.Tankless is only really good in the south. I guess you could put two tankless in series to get increase the delta temp. But yeah, I'm hoping the tech improves as I definitely want to look at that in the future. I hear they are not very DIY friendly though, lot of electronics and stuff.
Well, you need a couple of guys to remove the old tank, and to bring in the new one too. $200 seems inexpensive to me, unless you have everything set up for the plumber in advance, and all the piping and ducting is extra.For a plumber it's a 15 minute job, you've got the 220, hot and cold lines right there. They say your paying for expertize that might be needed if problems arise and I guess that's true, but there's not very much can go wrong installing a WH..
Speaking of water heaters, do they make ones that work the same way as high efficiency furnaces and are they actually obtainable? It seems to me we are still in the dark ages as far as hot water heaters go. The fact that I can burn myself if I touch the exhaust shows how inefficient they are. That heat is being wasted instead of going towards the water. The power vent ones arn't really any different, the air is just traveling at a higher velocity so the ABS pipe does not melt, and I think they ARE a tad more efficient, but still not comparable to a high efficiency closed combustion loop furnace.
Electric is probably the most efficient, but gas is cheaper to run.
Well, you need a couple of guys to remove the old tank, and to bring in the new one too. $200 seems inexpensive to me, unless you have everything set up for the plumber in advance, and all the piping and ducting is extra.
My 50 gallon power vented one took two guys and a dolly to remove it, and they had a lot of trouble getting it up the stairs.It's a one-man job assuming you drain the old water heater prior to removing it. They aren't too heavy empty. I just rolled mine onto a dolly.
My 50 gallon tank heater couldn't fill my huge soaker tub. The heater sprung a leak last year, and I didn't have enough height for a 75 gallon tank, so I just replaced it with a tankless.
With 199900 BTUs, it's fine enough for Toronto winters. I can run a strong shower and another fixture at the same time no problem in the dead of winter. (Shower head is an 8x12" rectangular shower head with decent flow.) It's also OK with two lower flow shower heads running simultaneously, but not fine if one of the shower heads is higher flow. (A guest shower has a higher flow head from the 1990s. I'm going to put a modern lower flow head on it soon so that when guests take a shower, it doesn't affect our master bedroom shower too much.)
Actually, I have a small, 6 gallon buffer tank after the tankless. It's just an electric tank. The reason I got it is to eliminate the delay associated with tankless, and to eliminate the cold water sandwich.
Main drawbacks of tankless is there is no hot water in a power outage, even for my natural gas powered one, so I just installed a cheap sine wave UPS for under $200, and it needs to be flushed every couple of years. Oh and it's expensive. Mind you, a name-brand power vented 75 gallon tank would have cost a lot too. The truly inexpensive tanks are usually 50 gallons and less, and not power vented.
Well, you need a couple of guys to remove the old tank, and to bring in the new one too. $200 seems inexpensive to me, unless you have everything set up for the plumber in advance, and all the piping and ducting is extra.
See my post just above yours:You don't need a "couple of guys", just drain the old tank before moving it then roll it out to the curb on it's edge. It's easy for me because I had to roll a lot of 55gl drums around in my last job and an empty WH is light, plus since mine was electric there was on ducting involved, just plumbing the TP release valve which took 10 minutes.
So I had a look around and it seems these power-vented natural gas 50-gallon tanks are around 150-170 lbs brand new. Add some piping and some sediment and add some stairs, and you've got some trouble, esp. if it's a narrow corridor.My 50 gallon power vented one took two guys and a dolly to remove it, and they had a lot of trouble getting it up the stairs.
I tried lifting it after it was emptied and I could barely budge it. I'm not Arnie, but I'm not 98 lbs either.
I suspect though it was because it was around 14 years old and probably had a lot of sediment in it.