nick205
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posted on 15/3/23 at 11:01 AM |
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Replacing tap ceramic cartridges?
Question for the LCB knowledge bank...
My kitchen mixer tap's developed a periodic drip. 99.9% sure it's the ceramic cartridge on the hot water side so purchased a pair of
replacement hot and cold cartridges to fit. Looks a simple enough job.
2mm Allen key to remove lever handle.
17mm spanner to remove cartridge.
Then reverse process to install replacement.
Anyone else done this and any words of wisdom - major do's / don'ts?
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John P
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posted on 15/3/23 at 11:19 AM |
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Sound obvious but do make sure they are exactly the same.
I have found that whilst the cartridge may fit into the tap body OK the length of the external thread where the shroud fits can be different as can
the length of the spline and the female thread where the screw that secures the lever goes.
John.
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coyoteboy
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posted on 15/3/23 at 12:16 PM |
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Turn off the stopcock first.
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nick205
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:32 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by John P
Sound obvious but do make sure they are exactly the same.
I have found that whilst the cartridge may fit into the tap body OK the length of the external thread where the shroud fits can be different as can
the length of the spline and the female thread where the screw that secures the lever goes.
John.
May sound obvious, but still sound advice.
The tap itself is a Franke Olympus and I've bought genuine Franke Olympus cartridges. I'll still be checking all dimensions between old and
new though.
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nick205
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:35 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by coyoteboy
Turn off the stopcock first.
Again, sound advice.
The house stop cock will be shut off, as will individual hot and cold service valves beneath the tap.
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David Jenkins
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:38 PM |
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Check whether hot and cold are different rotation directions for on - off. Mine were.
Every ceramic valve tap I've ever had has dripped within a few years. I don't know whether it's something in our water (it's
neutral to hard) or whether there's electrolytic corrosion going on, but the brass in the valve units have failed. All my taps now are of the
rubber washer type - easy and cheap to fix, as you can get a pack of rubber washers for a Pound or two from almost any hardware shop. Better than
having to send off a heap of money to a particular maker!
Luddite, who me?
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westf27
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:41 PM |
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Also the spline count does vary on the tap head shaft.
But with the few provisos the job is usually simple enough.
555
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nick205
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:50 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by David Jenkins
Check whether hot and cold are different rotation directions for on - off. Mine were.
Every ceramic valve tap I've ever had has dripped within a few years. I don't know whether it's something in our water (it's
neutral to hard) or whether there's electrolytic corrosion going on, but the brass in the valve units have failed. All my taps now are of the
rubber washer type - easy and cheap to fix, as you can get a pack of rubber washers for a Pound or two from almost any hardware shop. Better than
having to send off a heap of money to a particular maker!
Luddite, who me?
Tap is 18 years old (as is the kitchen I fitted). I know this, because I fitted it just before first child who's now 17 yrs and 3 months.
Tap has been faultless up to now and we live (Hampshire) in a very hard water area. Regular kettle and shower head descaling required.
Replacement cartridges I've got are the same rotation directions (already checked).
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nick205
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posted on 15/3/23 at 01:51 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by westf27
Also the spline count does vary on the tap head shaft.
But with the few provisos the job is usually simple enough.
Replacement cartridges have the same spline count and shaft Ø (already checked).
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perksy
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posted on 15/3/23 at 07:33 PM |
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Some good advice above and if your fitting genuine cartridges you should be fine
Checking the mating face inside the tap for scale or corrosion before fitting the new cartridges
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indykid
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posted on 15/3/23 at 09:47 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by nick205
quote: Originally posted by David Jenkins
Check whether hot and cold are different rotation directions for on - off. Mine were.
Every ceramic valve tap I've ever had has dripped within a few years. I don't know whether it's something in our water (it's
neutral to hard) or whether there's electrolytic corrosion going on, but the brass in the valve units have failed. All my taps now are of the
rubber washer type - easy and cheap to fix, as you can get a pack of rubber washers for a Pound or two from almost any hardware shop. Better than
having to send off a heap of money to a particular maker!
Luddite, who me?
Tap is 18 years old (as is the kitchen I fitted). I know this, because I fitted it just before first child who's now 17 yrs and 3 months.
Tap has been faultless up to now and we live (Hampshire) in a very hard water area. Regular kettle and shower head descaling required.
Replacement cartridges I've got are the same rotation directions (already checked).
I was going to say there's a 5 year warranty on the valves but that's long gone...
We have a franke ascona that's been through both its hot and cold warranty replacement valves. The warranty claim was dead easy, just ring a
parts company and email them the receipt and a pair of valves arrive in the post.
For the process, isolate the water, remove the valve (prepare for the water in the tap neck to run back out at you - it's not a gusher, but
don't panic that the water's not shut off) clean the tap body, fit the new valve, refit the lever, job jobbed.
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JoelP
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posted on 15/3/23 at 10:33 PM |
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How tight you do the cartridges affects the position of the handle when it's off. The splines only allow approx alignment. Check the handles line
up satisfactorily before packing up - you can tweek by tightening the valve slightly.
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nick205
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posted on 16/3/23 at 01:52 PM |
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perksy, indykid & JoelP
Thanks for the advice
1. Will make sure the mating faces are clean and damage free bfore installing the new cartridges.
2. Will prepare for the tap spout run back.
3. Will check hot/cold lever positions/operation as part of fitting new cartridges.
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nick205
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posted on 24/3/23 at 03:59 PM |
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Job done - simples.
Parts easy to fit and dripping stopped.
Realise now how worn the old cartridges were.
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