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No hay artículos en el carroNever pay retail
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de febrero de 2024
I could probably have gotten away with just replacing the washers and springs, but once you have the whole thing torn apart, you might as well replace everything, right? There are some really good videos on YouTube about how to do this. We did have some trouble getting the dome nut off. At first, we used a pipe wrench as recommended in the comments section of the video we watched. Clearly the nut was not coming lose and the entire valve was beginning to twist in the wall. This can lead to catastrophic porblems. We switched to a chanel lock and were able to get it lose and proceed with the repair. My suggestion, soak the entire nut area of your old valve repeatedly for days in advance with some sort of "Bolt Off" lubricant. Before you try to unscrew it, rap on the dome nut all the way around. I don't mean tap lightly nor do I mean for you to beat on it. But you need to knock it pretty good to loosen those threads. Also, get some silicone paste and slather all the new parts up good before you put it back together. Doing this yourself will save you hundreds over what a plumber would charge. Good luck!
Buyer1
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 30 de septiembre de 2024
Worked like a charm. All parts fit perfectly, and there's no more leaky bathtub spout.Happy customer.
Brando
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de enero de 2023
Did just what I needed. Stopped an old leaky Delta faucet from dripping without needing to do any major work or replace the whole thing. Used on a single knob bath/shower diverter faucet and the job was done in 10m.
Yuri Koltypin
Comentado en Canadá el 19 de abril de 2023
It works.
Wesley E.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 20 de abril de 2019
I bought this because the twenty-year-old bathroom faucet's seals had given out, so it was either try to fix it or replace the whole faucet with a new one. I had already disassembled the faucet, so I felt alright in trying a repair.The faucet kit arrived promptly, and the same evening I set about applying it. I thought perhaps I would need to look online for instructions, but I found an instruction guide was printed with the package label. I looked over the parts, and was momentarily wondering whether I had ordered the right kit, but the instructions mentioned that the part design had changed. They also specified removing the adjustment ring that had the job of keeping enough pressure on gaskets so that they did not leak. I replaced the two small rubber sleeved seals for the supplies and their springs, after doing the recommended cleaning of the ports with a soft cloth. The new ball's post went through the gasket assembly, and all that went into the faucet barrel. I removed the no-longer-needed adjustment ring from the barrel cover, then tightened down the barrel cover. I positioned the handle to midway and slowly turned on the supply lines in turn, verifying no leakage was happening where it shouldn't, then bringing the handle to the closed position and seeing that there was no flow there. That all took me about thirty minutes, and I was being slow and making sure I read the directions because of the parts change. Next time, I think a changeover would take me maybe twenty minutes from starting disassembly to putting the decorative handle cover back on. The newly repaired faucet handle moves more freely, yet does not have any leakage. This is one time where the newly re-engineered solution succeeds brilliantly. It is easier to put together, has fewer adjustments that have to happen, and works better than the original ever did. Congratulations to the product designers.
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