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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Removing plastic tap handle
I have a bath tap with an acrylic plastic handle. The handle is held in
place with a screw in the centre of the top. Above the screw there is a recessed plastic disk (red or blue). Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. -- Michael Chare |
#2
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Removing plastic tap handle
On 04/11/2015 14:31, Michael Chare wrote:
I have a bath tap with an acrylic plastic handle. The handle is held in place with a screw in the centre of the top. Above the screw there is a recessed plastic disk (red or blue). Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. A sharp blade, and hope for the best. This is one of life's mysteries, ie whether the people who design these things think. |
#3
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Removing plastic tap handle
On Wed, 4 Nov 2015 14:31:09 +0000, Michael Chare wrote:
Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. -- Cheers Dave. |
#4
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Removing plastic tap handle
On Wed, 4 Nov 2015 14:40:21 +0000, GB
wrote: On 04/11/2015 14:31, Michael Chare wrote: I have a bath tap with an acrylic plastic handle. The handle is held in place with a screw in the centre of the top. Above the screw there is a recessed plastic disk (red or blue). Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. A sharp blade, and hope for the best. This is one of life's mysteries, ie whether the people who design these things think. You could try a small rubber sucker - the type used on old toy arrows. Or maybe the disks have a screw thread and require unscrewing somehow. -- Dave W |
#5
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Removing plastic tap handle
"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message ll.co.uk... On Wed, 4 Nov 2015 14:31:09 +0000, Michael Chare wrote: Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. Or the point of a scriber. |
#6
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Removing plastic tap handle
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 01:21:35 -0000, bm wrote:
Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. Or the point of a scriber. Scriber to remove cack along the join but not for pushing in/levering. The pressures at points of contact are too high and the plastic will deform. The ideal tool is something thin, stiff and hard but not hard like metal, hard like hard plastic. Trouble is thin, hard plastic tends not to be very stiff. -- Cheers Dave. |
#7
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Removing plastic tap handle
On 04/11/2015 21:43, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Wed, 4 Nov 2015 14:31:09 +0000, Michael Chare wrote: Any suggestion as to how I might remove these plastic disks without damaging the handle or the disk. The disks have been there for some time so no doubt held in place by a little grime. Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. I am in a hard water area, so the problem could well be limescale. I will try some bleach. Thank you for the suggestion. -- Michael Chare |
#8
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Removing plastic tap handle
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 12:10:21 +0000, Michael Chare wrote:
Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. I am in a hard water area, so the problem could well be limescale. I will try some bleach. Thank you for the suggestion. Bleach != Lime Scale Remover. -- Cheers Dave. |
#9
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Removing plastic tap handle
You could try a small rubber sucker - the type used on old toy arrows. Or maybe the disks have a screw thread and require unscrewing somehow. -- or a stronger-type sucker with a lever can be found on a SatNav windscreen mount. Worked for me. |
#10
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Removing plastic tap handle
On Thu, 05 Nov 2015 16:54:05 +0000, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 12:10:21 +0000, Michael Chare wrote: Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. I am in a hard water area, so the problem could well be limescale. I will try some bleach. Thank you for the suggestion. Bleach != Lime Scale Remover. Vinegar works OK though. |
#11
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Removing plastic tap handle
On 05/11/2015 21:25, Bob Eager wrote:
On Thu, 05 Nov 2015 16:54:05 +0000, Dave Liquorice wrote: On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 12:10:21 +0000, Michael Chare wrote: Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. I am in a hard water area, so the problem could well be limescale. I will try some bleach. Thank you for the suggestion. Bleach != Lime Scale Remover. Vinegar works OK though. +1 |
#12
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Removing plastic tap handle
On 05/11/2015 16:54, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 12:10:21 +0000, Michael Chare wrote: Clean the tops well and leave a damp cloth over them for a few hours, if your water is hard soak with dilute lime scale remover. Look carefully for a recess along the edge of the cap into which insert a small bluntish flat blade screwdriver. I am in a hard water area, so the problem could well be limescale. I will try some bleach. Thank you for the suggestion. Bleach != Lime Scale Remover. OK I really meant: 'toilet cleaner limescale remover 5x more powerful than bleach** by Sainsbury's' -- Michael Chare |
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