Speedfit catastophic failure.
"Andy Hall" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 4 May 2004 17:03:44 +0100, "IMM" wrote:
"Grunff" wrote in message
...
IMM wrote:
A hacksaw and trimmed it off with Stanley knife to remove an burred
edges.
ROFL!! You're a real pro...
What Hepworth say...
We do recommend the use of a Hep2O pipe cutter, however any pipe cutter
designed to cut plastics pipes should be suitable. One of the major
advantages of a purpose designed cutter is speed, however the
requirements
for the cutter are that it should cut the tube square without scoring or
scratching the pipe or leaving burrs or swarf which could get under the
'O'
ring. It is for this reason that hacksaws should not be used.
The inventive can find many ways of achieving a perfectly acceptable
clean,
square cut using a variety of tools.
which does not include a hacksaw.
Never said that.
The Hepworth Plumbing Products Team
An amateur will make a hash of it if the cutters are not available. You
see
a professional will achieve a nice burr free square cut with tools
available.
I think not. A professional would have the proper tools.
If he was doing a job during the day, not helping out during the evening.
Trying to then pretend that the product
is faulty is ridiculous
The product is poor. How would you know anyway?
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