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MM
 
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On Sun, 14 Aug 2005 19:36:23 +0100, "Dave Baker"
wrote:


MM wrote in message
.. .
My nearly new kitchen (almost brand new house) is fitted with a white
mixer tap on the sink. It has a central swan neck-type spout with hot
and cold taps either side of the body (180 degrees opposite each
other).

Over the last few days I have noticed that the spout is increasingly
difficult to swivel. However, it gets easier when I run the hot tap
for a minute or two. There is a threaded ferrule (a smooth white ring
on the outside, threaded inside where it screws over the boss) holding
the spout into the tap body. I unscrewed the ferrule and there appears
to be a kind of circlip that actually holds the spout in place. (The
ferrule merely covers up the clip.) However, the circlip, while having
a small gap in its circumference, is round in section and looks pretty
impossible to get out.

Is this in any way serviceable? Could I actually achieve anything by
removing the spout and possibly replacing a seal? The 'feel' you get
when you turn the spout is of a rubber seal that is 'dry'.

MM


You should be able to firkle that type of circlip out with a watchmaker's
screwdriver or a small scriber. They are common enough in engines although
there's usually a small cutout in the housing where you can get a
screwdriver in behind them. A little vaseline on the seal might be all it
needs.


If I do manage to prise the circlip out, will the spout suddenly
spring out of the tap body? I don't know what to expect!

MM