I did consider the basement air could be pretty humid (great suggestion). Since we have a lot of items stored in the basement & don't want them to get moldy/smelly...we have two dehumidifiers running all year long that I empty every 1-2 days (or when full).
Basement is also semi-finished (has poured concrete on the floor...but not super thick)...has dry finished walls (drywall)...has baseboard heat...and did have carpeting (but we removed it since the previous owners cat's pissed eveywhere & it stank). Damn cats!
Basement isn't super dry...but a lot better than it would be without the 2 dehumidifiers. I'm thinking what "Jim Handy" suggested above is very likely the source of the moisture/condensation (burning natural gas creates moisture)...and don't have the best draft in the flue.
The condensation issue on the cold nipple definitely only starts when the gas burner kicks on & stops when the gas burner kicks off. The cold nipple is 100% dry all other times. If basement humidity was the issue...I'm thinking the water heater nipples would be "wet with condensate" all/most of the time.
Thanks
Basement is also semi-finished (has poured concrete on the floor...but not super thick)...has dry finished walls (drywall)...has baseboard heat...and did have carpeting (but we removed it since the previous owners cat's pissed eveywhere & it stank). Damn cats!
Basement isn't super dry...but a lot better than it would be without the 2 dehumidifiers. I'm thinking what "Jim Handy" suggested above is very likely the source of the moisture/condensation (burning natural gas creates moisture)...and don't have the best draft in the flue.
The condensation issue on the cold nipple definitely only starts when the gas burner kicks on & stops when the gas burner kicks off. The cold nipple is 100% dry all other times. If basement humidity was the issue...I'm thinking the water heater nipples would be "wet with condensate" all/most of the time.
Thanks