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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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On Apr 30, 1:11 pm, wrote:
There's no way I'd use the garden hose type valves that are meant to screw onto a sillcock. I've never seen one of those that I would consider well built, sturdy, etc to use for a washer. If you can't get at the existing ones to replace them, what exactly is the problem? I'd prefer ball valves too, but it the existing gate ones work, which is what the vast majority have anyway, why screw around? The existing gate valves may or may not work for their intended purpose... I never turn them off because of the stigma associated with them (they are often seized open, or the packing nut starts leaking once you turn them, etc). But to avoid un-needed problems with burst hoses, I want to be able to shut the supply off except when in use. I could theoretically get access to replace the existing valves, which would be the best solution but it would be a lot of work. Like many home owners, my spare time has a supply/demand crisis (thanks to the leaky roof, the leaky barn, and the leaky patio door ;-). So I'm looking for an easier alternative. |
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