🔥 Stay Cool, Save Energy!
The Reliance 9001954-045 Upper Electric Thermostat is a modern, eco-friendly solution designed for electric water heaters. Weighing just 4 ounces and featuring a sleek black design, this thermostat ensures precise temperature control while maximizing energy efficiency. With a compact size of 11 x 4 x 3 inches, it’s easy to install and fits seamlessly into any home decor.
Manufacturer | Reliance |
Part Number | 9001954-045 |
Item Weight | 4 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 11 x 4 x 3 inches |
Country of Origin | China |
Item model number | 9001954-045 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Size | Pack of 1 |
Color | Black |
Style | Modern |
Material | Plastic |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Voltage | 240 Volts |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Included Components | Reliance 9001954-045 Upper Electric Thermostat With ECO |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Warranty Description | Warranty |
R**1
Perfect
Easy install works great
V**I
Exact replacement for a Sears water heater upper thermostat...
Reliance W10A 9001954-045 Upper Electric Thermostat – WH10AOur water heater’s upper electric water heater thermostat had WH10A printed on it, so this appeared to be and was, the exact replacement part. Sears, Westinghouse, State Select, and many other brands use this as the upper thermostat – and a part labeled WH9 or WH9-6D (long shaft for exposed control knobs) for the lower thermostat.WH10A operation: electrifies the upper heating element until the set water temperature is reached; then transfers all power to the bottom thermostat and element.WH9 operation: electrifies the lower heating element until its set water temperature is reached, then turns off.Set the dial on each thermostat to the approximate same temperature, typically between 110 and 140 according to preferences. Note that you can’t always rely on the markings on each thermostat and will need to use trial and error. An infrared thermometer (point & shoot type, with a digital readout) is very useful in verifying water temps, and can instantly show the temperature of tap water or of the steel outside of the hot water tank next to the lower thermostat (when the thermostat’s cover is off). Setting the WH10A thermostat midway at “B” resulted in 120 degree hot water, which suited us.Only one heating element is electrified at a time, otherwise, the current draw would exceed 7200 watts and (on many water heaters) the circuit breaker would trip. 7200 watts is the maximum capacity of a 240 volt, 30 amp,10 gauge wired, circuit. For example, both elements on with our water heater would draw 9,300 watts.Typical water heater failure symptoms include:1. Water doesn’t get sufficiently hot:... one or both thermostats is set too low; or...upper thermostat transfers power before the set temperature is reached AND the lower thermostat shuts off prematurely (i.e., both thermostats are defective).2. Water is scalding hot:... a defective thermostat locks on power to its corresponding heating element; or... one or both thermostats is set too high.3. Water never gets hot:... the upper thermostat fails, so the top of the tank isn’t heated; and power is never transferred to the lower thermostat / element; or... the upper heating element failed; or... both thermostats are set too low; or... the 220 volt circuit breaker has tripped (see your service entrance panel); or... circuit breaker wires are loose; or... there are loose / burned-out thermostat or element wiring; or... a thermostat reset button tripped (Note: the red reset button or 'high limit control' or Energy Cut Off / ECO will cut off electric power to the entire water heater).4. Water temperatures wildly varying – happens if there is inconsistent thermostatic function5. Low volume of hot water:... the upper tank heats properly but that thermostat fails to then transfer power to the lower thermostat / element, resulting in hot water in the top of the tank only; or... the upper thermostat is working properly but the lower thermostat or lower heating element failed; or... a thermostat is set too low.6. Hot water recovery rate is low:... the upper thermostat transfer of power to the lower element is locked on; or... the lower heating element failed; or... a thermostat is set too low.Upon a suspected malfunction, try pressing the red reset button on both thermostats as a stop-gap measure. If you hear a snap sound (reset of its thermal disk), or it won’t stay pushed in, you may need to replace that thermostat. If the water is scalding hot and the thermostat’s temperatures are set properly, switch the breaker off until the water cools, turn it back on when it drops to 120 degrees, and keep switching it on/off while waiting for parts to arrive. Replace the small pieces of insulation covering each thermostat only after final testing. There can be water heater issues other than those listed above, not counting outright leaks.An unwired heating element is shot if an ohm meter shows no continuity between its terminals. Without removing any wires, you can also test an element with the heater’s circuit breaker on. Use a volt meter to measure the power at a heating element. When electrified, the reading should be 220-240 volts AC and that area should get hot. If the tank adjacent to the element doesn’t warm up (use an infrared thermometer), that element is likely dead. Remove the heater’s thermostat/element cover to test using a volt meter. Be very careful, so you don’t get shocked.I gave it 5 stars because the W10A thermostat I received worked perfectly. The lower (WH9) thermostat on our water heater was also defective – it shut off at 110 degrees even on the maximum setting -- so I replaced that thermostat also. In any case, these parts are relatively inexpensive, especially compared to hiring a plumber or getting a new water heater, so consider replacing both thermostats if either fails, just in case.More...- 240Volt water heaters have 2 hot wires and a ground wire. Each hot wire is called a leg. Each leg is 120 volts with 240 volt potential when both legs are connected.- Thermostats turn off only one leg in the 240Volt circuit. The other leg puts live power to a heating element at all times, but draws no power because it’s only ½ a circuit.- Each element should read 120Volts between the element and the grounded steel tank (or a ground wire) if the circuit breaker is on.- When a thermostat turns ON, that connects the second leg to the element’s first leg, and the element turns ON and heats.- In some cases, a heating element can crack or short. In many cases, a short will trip the electric panel circuit breaker.- If the crack or short is far enough along in the element, the resistance may not cause breaker to trip.- If an element continues heating, and will not turn off, you’ll have runaway heating, and the temperature/pressure relief valve could open, releasing water – or the ECO (energy cut-off) reset will trip, or water will be hotter than usual.
K**E
direct replacement for Upper thermostat on electric water heater.
very easy to replace, good directions in package, works great. Very cost effective to a service call.
G**Y
Works fine
This replaces review of April 10th. Product did arrive the 11th, after indications it would not be here until April 16th. Product is fine, does what it is suppose to do.
J**T
Perfect replacement
Fit my AO Smith 50 gallon water heater tank perfectly
N**H
Good, but image of product was wrong.
This is not a OE product.It is equal function to the OE though.
L**Z
Reemplaso identico al original
Reeplaso es igual al original, funciona perfectamente.
S**E
As advertised
As pictured and described and not perfectly.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago