File: IMG_20260421_191727_599.jpg (227.3 KB)
Stainless steel sink. I would like to patch it so it's flush. Any ideas? What's the best adhesive? The hole is 1.25 inches. Not sure the thickness of the steel.
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>hijacking solved thread to not make a new one. Enjoy free bump op
>Moen Georgene Spot Resist Stainless Single Handle Deck-mount Pull-down Kitchen Faucet with Sprayer
>Handle loosening is common consoomer complaint
>wouldn't turn off this morning bc ceramic busted
>replace with a 1255 moen cylinder from me nards
>this model already had shitty flow, now it's got an enlarged prostate
>take off sprayer nozzle, check how hose itself works. Still bad flow
The house has galvanized pipes from '73 all the other water works fine. Could it be turning the valves on and off multiple times dislodged some sediment? I did flush it into the sink before installing new cylinder. Currently soaking faucet head in clr to try and dislodge whatever is keeping me from getting screen off
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>>2988124
>>2988132
No fittings or adapter necessary on the model mentioned. Not even Teflon tape. Screw the thing on, then g2g. The new one works turning on/off hot/cold. Just the flow. When I'm not half drunk and pissed off, I'll try to take the whole faucet out tomorrow and check the lines for debris.
Or just cut losses and get a faucet with separate sprayer
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File: Screenshot_20260427-165629_Chrome.jpg (469.3 KB)
>>2988139
I won't rule that out seeing as I didn't actually check the valve itself. Figured if it turns water on/off, it just werks. But alright, since I'm down there messing with hoses anyway, why not shut off main water and check valves.
Ty for advice. In return, you get my Google search screenshot
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>>2988141
No problem. You said:
>I did flush it into the sink before installing new cylinder
>all the other water works fine
>turning the valves on and off multiple times
which leads me to believe it's the shutoff valve. FWIW
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>>2988119
I believe the pull down hose is two parts connected together by a plastic piece
disconnect hoses and unscrew that piece, inside you will find some pressure reducers that are great at gathering debris
pop em out with something thin and reconnect everything
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>>2988146
>>2988186
Update on faucet.
>Disconnected the hoses
>chunk of rust or something that disintegrated when I poked it with Allen wrench
>attach cold to hot, with the hot hose draining into bucket to flush
>do opposite with hot to cold
>hot water works better and faster than ever
>cold still sucks
>what's this? Google tells me the valve on cold water is a waste and drain valve
>hot water has reg stop valve
So I guess the next logical step is replace with regular stop valve and see. /facepalm
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File: 20260429_202039.jpg (1.5 MB)
And this is what I'm calling hose adapter, bc I don't know much pipe jargon. Although I did get an elbow a bit ago seeing as that would probably be as crusty as the coupler. Anything aside from that probably means knocking down a wall
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>>2988445
>I'm calling hose adapter
supply line
yeah you got old as fuck galvanized pipes, there will be perpetual rust and corrosion
>>2988452
i'd bet that old shutoff valve is failed and not opening all the way, possible built up with debris
you want to replace it with a 1/2" fip shutoff x 3/8 and replace your supply lines with 3/8 by 1/2
that drainage t is really somethin
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Christ. My house is mostly galvanized. When I replaced an original valve (stem was stripped where it met the handle and I was tired of using vise grips on it) and the inside looked nowhere near that bad. The valve was from 1951.
Is that corrosion caused by not using a dielectric union or is your water terrible?
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File: 20260429_214454.jpg (2.2 MB)
So now that I mocked up the same assembly, hot and cold water back to a slow flow like it was before the cylinder broke. So I'm calling it tonight seeing as it's too late for hardware store
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>>2988459
Okay, what metal are the valves made from? You can't mix steel and copper/brass/bronze pipe or you will get nasty galvanic corrosion. The valves don't appear to be that old and they also appear gold colored in the photos. Are they brass? If they are, that is why your shit clogged up.
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File: 20260429_225529.jpg (1.9 MB)
>>2988464
Brand new cartridge. Might need to flush again
>>2988465
Brass, but left one in pic mentioned is hot line, which had no problems. Few years old. Right is all brand new. Done today, so corrosion there is nonexistent
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>>2988468
You want to put a dielectric union between any steel parts and that valve. If you mix brass and galvanized steel without them you will be right back here in a few years. What is looks like you need for the right side is:
Elbow > dielectric union > brass nipple > brass stop valve > brass nipple > faucet line
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File: seafoam-green-color-meaning-symbolism-infographic[1].png (258.8 KB)
>>2988475
As an owner of an older home I basically dread fixing anything that I haven't already worked on myself. The things I have discovered in this place boggle the mind. Some of it was done well but some of it was done by a lazy moron.
My favorite one was finding two different random keys hanging from a single nail in the water heater closet. They were 6 feet up on the door casing on the inside. I only saw them because we replaced the water heater and I walked into the tiny closet when it was empty and turned around. That is how I also discovered that the interiors were originally painted seafoam green. What did they go to? No idea. They didn't match any of the existing locks. The closet it inside the house, so it is not like an extra house key. None of the interior doors took keys either. Why there? There was a literally key keeper built into the original cabinetry in the hallway. Life must be so difficult when you are stupid.
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>>2988613
Yup, 1951. At some point the walls inside the closet had been painted white but they didn't do the space around the doorframe. I later found this to be the case with all of the closets in the house. Makes sense when you are a lazy moron though. If you can't see it it does not exist.
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>>2987351
Be a real man and drill another one on the other side to match and then put in bluetooth waterproof speakers with a cool metallic grill. Put in deep blue led lights under the mesh around them too. Who cares what your wife thinks, this is for you.