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Discuss Tool for stubborn tap head gear? in the Plumbing Tools area at Plumbers Forums

JCplumb

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Plumber
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As the title suggests. Anyone know of a decent tool for removing a really stubborn tap head gear?
I've usually managed to crack them after a while but one job a couple of months ago had me beat, the customer had these really old taps and he loved them and I was close to threading the 'nut' part of the tap head trying to remove it. I actually admitted defeat on that one but have promised him I will be back when I figure out how to get it off. I was there to replace a valve on his toilet but he mentioned the dripping taps and said that 2 other plumbers had failed at removing them before me.
I remember seeing something on dragons den a year or so ago, it looked decent to be fair but was slated by the dragons.
 
Had to use a socket on a ceramic disc works - socket gets a good grip. Also, if you really had to, a set of grips will not " round off " the nut part, & tend to grip well.
If you have trouble removing the bell shaped cover on the really old taps, try tapping all around the bottom of the cover with the rubber coated handles part of pliers or similar. Can take a while, but often allows them to slacken by hand.
 
Yes, especially the modern taps may need taken off & into a vice, as they are metal to metal works to tap body. If very tight, try putting the spindle only into vice jaws & put a piece of wood against the tap spout & give it a sharp tap with a hammer.
 
I've done years of reactive maintenance and i've never had a tap head I couldn't remove.
A ring spanner on the head gear, an adjustable on the tap spout and squeeze them together. Sometimes you have to mount the sink to get some purchase which always raises eyebrows lol.
 
There is a spray sold in Screw Fix, which freezes the offending item and while it is contracting is sucks in a lubricating oil.

Used it once on something. Can't rememeber what but I still have half the can in the van. Might be worth a try. It's called Crack It Freeze Spray. ae235.jpg
 
I've done years of reactive maintenance and i've never had a tap head I couldn't remove.
A ring spanner on the head gear, an adjustable on the tap spout and squeeze them together. Sometimes you have to mount the sink to get some purchase which always raises eyebrows lol.

I use this technique, well kind of. Put spanner on the tap cartridge, and use my big grips to squeeze the spanner and tap body together. Just make sure you have summat on the spout to stop it getting scratched!


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Wrap the tap spouts in soft tissue and a cloth and tape them up fully to protect the tap. Slide a 600mm pole, e.g steel pipe or small section of scaffold tube over the spout and you've now got extra leverage. Spray the tap heads with good old WD40 and let it sink in for about 5 mins. Hold the steel tube over the taps as a lever, and loosen off the tap head with 12" stillsons with another section of pipe/scaffold over the handle. Two people are sometimes better at this.
It may sound daft, but try to tighten the tap head once first before slackening it off. If you tighten anything even a bolt or screw first it slackens off much easier.

The other way is to remove the taps and put them in a vice, if all else fails.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
jc i have some spanners just for removing tap valves, save you buying ring spanners if you dont have em already. im in bolton too you can borrow em if you like.

Thanks for the offer but I'm only going to sort the tap next time I'm there, I get a fair bit of repeat business from this customer and the dripping tap is really just a niggle for him rather than a job that would require its own visit (and charge).
 

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