Ice Maker Line Question
Trying to replace icemaker line as the old copper one sprung a leak.
I bought the kit and you would think it wouldn't be much harder than hooking up a hose to a faucet but of course I am running into trouble, and I would like to blame it on the vague directions on the bag. I am having a bitch of a time getting the compression screw onto the nozzle. How far should the copper line go through the screw? |
Ice Maker Line Question
"Jeffy3" wrote in message oups.com... Trying to replace icemaker line as the old copper one sprung a leak. I bought the kit and you would think it wouldn't be much harder than hooking up a hose to a faucet but of course I am running into trouble, and I would like to blame it on the vague directions on the bag. I am having a bitch of a time getting the compression screw onto the nozzle. How far should the copper line go through the screw? There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut. |
Ice Maker Line Question
On Jan 27, 2:18 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote: ooglegroups.com... ?There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut. Thanks. I meant a compression nut. The compression nuts which came with the kit had the ferrule already inside the nut. Should the nut be able to completely screw onto the female end of the T fitting? I can't get it on more than halfway, and there's a slow drip coming out of the other side of the nut (not the side closest to the T fitting). What is normal cause of a drip? Not tight enough? Too tight? Ferrule in wrong place? |
Ice Maker Line Question
On Jan 28, 1:27 pm, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 27, 2:18 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote: ooglegroups.com... ?There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut.Thanks. I meant a compression nut. The compression nuts which came with the kit had the ferrule already inside the nut. Should the nut be able to completely screw onto the female end of the T fitting? I can't get it on more than halfway, and there's a slow drip coming out of the other side of the nut (not the side closest to the T fitting). What is normal cause of a drip? Not tight enough? Too tight? Ferrule in wrong place? The nut should go on most, or all of the way. The ferrule should be seperate from the nut. As Edwin stated, the nut goes on the tubing, then the ferrule, and then you insert the tubing as far as it will go into the fitting. While keeping some pressure on it to make sure it stays all the way in, tighten down the nut, which compresses the ferrule against the tubing. If you botched it, easiest thing is to cut of the end of the tubing, get a new ferrule and redo. |
Ice Maker Line Question
On Jan 28, 1:47 pm, wrote: On Jan 28, 1:27 pm, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 27, 2:18 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote: ooglegroups.com... ?There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut.Thanks. I meant a compression nut. The compression nuts which came with the kit had the ferrule already inside the nut. Should the nut be able to completely screw onto the female end of the T fitting? I can't get it on more than halfway, and there's a slow drip coming out of the other side of the nut (not the side closest to the T fitting). What is normal cause of a drip? Not tight enough? Too tight? Ferrule in wrong place?The nut should go on most, or all of the way. The ferrule should be seperate from the nut. As Edwin stated, the nut goes on the tubing, then the ferrule, and then you insert the tubing as far as it will go into the fitting. While keeping some pressure on it to make sure it stays all the way in, tighten down the nut, which compresses the ferrule against the tubing. If you botched it, easiest thing is to cut of the end of the tubing, get a new ferrule and redo. Are there alternate names for these ferrules? I don't recall seeing anything by that name in the hardware store where the compression nuts were. |
Ice Maker Line Question
On Jan 29, 8:53 am, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 28, 1:47 pm, wrote: On Jan 28, 1:27 pm, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 27, 2:18 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote: ooglegroups.com... ?There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut.Thanks. I meant a compression nut. The compression nuts which came with the kit had the ferrule already inside the nut. Should the nut be able to completely screw onto the female end of the T fitting? I can't get it on more than halfway, and there's a slow drip coming out of the other side of the nut (not the side closest to the T fitting). What is normal cause of a drip? Not tight enough? Too tight? Ferrule in wrong place?The nut should go on most, or all of the way. The ferrule should be seperate from the nut. As Edwin stated, the nut goes on the tubing, then the ferrule, and then you insert the tubing as far as it will go into the fitting. While keeping some pressure on it to make sure it stays all the way in, tighten down the nut, which compresses the ferrule against the tubing. If you botched it, easiest thing is to cut of the end of the tubing, get a new ferrule and redo.Are there alternate names for these ferrules? I don't recall seeing anything by that name in the hardware store where the compression nuts were.- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - They may call them compression sleeves. Regardless of what they call them, they should be located with the compression fittings and very obvious. You get several of them in a small bag. |
Ice Maker Line Question
On Jan 29, 9:10 am, wrote: On Jan 29, 8:53 am, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 28, 1:47 pm, wrote: On Jan 28, 1:27 pm, "Jeffy3" wrote: On Jan 27, 2:18 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote: ooglegroups.com... ?There are no screws on a compression fitting. Do you mean the nut? if so, put the nut over the tubing, slip the ferrule over the tubing and leave about 1/4" showing. Slip that into the female end of the fitting and tighten the nut.Thanks. I meant a compression nut. The compression nuts which came with the kit had the ferrule already inside the nut. Should the nut be able to completely screw onto the female end of the T fitting? I can't get it on more than halfway, and there's a slow drip coming out of the other side of the nut (not the side closest to the T fitting). What is normal cause of a drip? Not tight enough? Too tight? Ferrule in wrong place?The nut should go on most, or all of the way. The ferrule should be seperate from the nut. As Edwin stated, the nut goes on the tubing, then the ferrule, and then you insert the tubing as far as it will go into the fitting. While keeping some pressure on it to make sure it stays all the way in, tighten down the nut, which compresses the ferrule against the tubing. If you botched it, easiest thing is to cut of the end of the tubing, get a new ferrule and redo.Are there alternate names for these ferrules? I don't recall seeing anything by that name in the hardware store where the compression nuts were.- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -They may call them compression sleeves. Regardless of what they call them, they should be located with the compression fittings and very obvious. You get several of them in a small bag.- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - Thanks. I believe they did have "sleeves" |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:13 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter