Reddit mentions: The best faucet parts

We found 384 Reddit comments discussing the best faucet parts. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 233 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

17. LASCO 17-0995 1/4-Inch Compression by 1/4-Inch Compression Brass Ball Valve

    Features:
  • Brass ball valve, lever handle
LASCO 17-0995 1/4-Inch Compression by 1/4-Inch Compression Brass Ball Valve
Specs:
Height1 Inches
Length0.5 Inches
Number of items1
Size1 Pack
Width2.5 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on faucet parts

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where faucet parts are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 28
Number of comments: 4
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 17
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Total score: 15
Number of comments: 8
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Total score: 13
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 12
Number of comments: 6
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Total score: 10
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 9
Number of comments: 7
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Total score: 9
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 4
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 0
Number of comments: 4
Relevant subreddits: 1

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u/kiwiandapple · 1 pointr/buildapcforme

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Reviews & quotes from the reviews or a short personal rationale:


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CPU:

  • Product page: datasheet
  • Review

    Gaming wise, you would be better off to go for the quad-core i7-7700K. But for editing, the extra cores & threads come in handy quickly.
    However the faster quad-cores do perform very well in Photoshop that doesn't care much about high core counts.

  • Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2015.3 CPU Comparison (similar to Sony Vegas; don't know how well it performs with multi-threading tho)
  • Adobe Photoshop CC Multi Core Performance

    CPU Cooler:

  • Review

    > The Corsair H100i V2 is a high-end AIO with high-end performance and build quality

    Motherboard:

  • Review #1
  • Review #2

    > The X99A Gaming Pro Carbon is a very well rounded X99 motherboard. It has many of the latest features that other X99-refresh motherboards in the same price bracket have, but with a lot of dazzle and flavor.

    Memory:

  • RAM capacity, how much do you need?

    RAM is RAM. Speed hardly matters above 2666MHz. I went for 2x16GB WHITE sticks for the looks mostly. This also allows you to upgrade to 64, 96 or 128GB later if really needed. I am sure that 32GB will be enough for a long while.

    Storage:

  • Review (960 PRO)

    > Unlike the 512GB 950 Pro, the 960 Pro does not hit any severe thermal throttling.

    Just wanted to get that out of the way!

    > The 960 Pro's read speed breaks away from the pack of other PCIe SSDs but still doesn't come close to the advertised 3.5GB/s. The write speed stands out even more and very slightly exceeds the advertised speed of 2100MB/s.

  • Review (850 EVO)

    > The 850 EVO is yet another showcase of Samsung's engineering talent and truth to be told there is a lot of good in the 850 EVO.

  • Review (X300)

    > Overall, the Toshiba X300 Desktop 6TB hard disk drive looks like a solid choice for anyone that needs a lot of capacity. May it be photos, videos, designs, or your game library, the X300 is sure to do a good job.

    Video Card:

  • Review #1

    > Today, we have the ASUS GTX 1080 STRIX Gaming OC on our test bench, and while its name is long, the card does come with a bunch of interesting new features that help set it apart from the competition.

  • Review #2

    > The ROG Strix GTX 1080 is the Royale with cheese - and I do like my Pulp Fiction quotes! The Strix ticks all the right boxes from factory tweak to looks, to the nice RGB LED system up-to the cooling levels. Noise wise, you will be able to slightly hear the fans under full load temperatures but it's still in what I call a silent product.

  • Review #3 (video)

    A very solid video with some good bit of information.

    Case:

  • Review

    The best case reviews come from this channel. Actually.. while listening to this review on the broad side. I have to add two things!

  1. Rubber washers to mount the HDDs with
  2. White 140mm fan filter for the top.

    Case fans:

  • Review

    > The clear standout of the fans tested today was the Noiseblocker NB-eLoop B12-2, which went toe-to-toe with the winner from our last roundup, the Scythe Gentle Typhoon 120-12. Still, we prefer the sound quality of the Gentle Typhoon and Noiseblocker M12 as they have more innocuous, broadband profiles. The B12-2 is an extremely effective fan for cooling but its acoustics are only average.

    The Sycthe Gentle Typhoon is sadly discontinued and extremely hard to find these days. They also are black & grey which doesn't match as well compared to the NoiseBlocker black & white fans.

    Power Supply:

  • Review

    > As always, EVGA's Super Flower based units continue to impress. Though the competition at Corsair is clearly catching up, the performance of this unit still more than holds its own with anything else near its price point.

    10 year warranty, 80+ platinium, fully-modular cable design, semi-passive fan profile & 850W PSU from EVGA made by SuperFlower. This is seriously an amazing high quality PSU. Remember to register it over at EVGA to get the easiest customer support & your extra warranty period.

    Monitor:

  • Review

    > This really is a very good gaming screen. If you're after an ultra-wide with high resolution, G-sync support and a nice boosted 100Hz refresh rate this is definitely worth checking out.

    Keyboard:

  • Review Careful, fairly loud!

    It is a TenKeyLess mode keyboard, which is perhaps not something you would prefer. But I had to include it, I am very close to ordering it.
    Wireless lagg is also fixed by simply pressing FN + 0.

    Mouse:

  • Review #1 (video)
  • Review #2 (video)
  • Review #3

    > This mouse is definitely one of the best out there for those with small-to-medium sized hands. Our Castor has been in the hands of a few people, and while all enjoy it, its physical size can be somewhat of a limit.

    Mousepad:

  • Awesome choice!

    Headphones:

  • Review #1 - very in depth!
  • Review #2 (video)

    > The AKG Q701’s are bright sounding headphones at first without proper amplification and brain burn in.
    If you don’t need isolation for gaming, throw away your gaming headsets and get AKG Q701’s. If you’re looking to get serious with your music, like detail retrieval and don’t mind spending an amplifier/dac combo that costs the same as the AKG Q701’s; get yourself a pair. If you want boomy bass, if you want isolation, if you want a smooth experience; look somewhere else, the AKG Q701’s aren’t for you. The Q701’s can be found for cheap now and definitely worth it.

    > Bumps in the headphone gets uncomfortable overtime, earcup placement is crucial in relative to sound perceived. I.e. earcups placed too far backward can cause mids to sound muffled. Velour earpads and ~270 gram weight allows comfort over long periods of time.

    > Large soundstage that has a 3D Surround better than 5.1 gaming headsets. Suffers from center imaging that relates to “in-your-head” feeling, however it has a prominent forward stage. Soundstage similar to standing in the back 24’x18’ room, 5' away from the wall.

    Truly, the best "gaming" audiophile headset on the market.

    Microphone:

  • Review
  • Review & Setup guide
  • Review

    Absolutely an amazing high quality microphone! Not a single microphone on a gaming headset will come close to this beast, of course it's pricey. But well worth it.


u/adaminc · 1 pointr/firewater

Sorry I'm late to respond, but if you want to reply to someone, you need to click the "reply" link under their comment. Then add your comment as a reply to them, it will notify them you replied, and they'll know the reply is for them.

This reply is probably a bit long, lol. But I'm bored, so I go into some detail, and give some suggestions on tools n' such you can use for various things. You don't have to use them, obviously.

===

  • Yes, break down all the starches before fermenting. Yeast can't use starches, they will release some enzymes, but none that will break down starches. The enzymes that break down starches come from the grain itself, or you add them. This is why you do the iodine test after mashing, but before fermenting, it is testing for the presence of starches, if it's blue, than all the starches haven't been converted and the yeast won't turn those starches into alcohol. So you need to continuing mashing, maybe add enzymes if you haven't already.

  • 2lbs of sugar should be enough for the batch.

  • The barley does need to be milled. The distiller shop should be able to crush/mill it for you, or if there is a feed supply store nearby, they might be able to do it for you. But whole grains aren't going to work because the starches will be trapped inside. Grain seeds are essentially made up of 3 parts: bran, endosperm, and germ. The bran is the outer shell that protects everything but it also contains some vitamins, the endosperm is where the starches and enzymes are contained, and the germ is where the actual plant embryo is, as well as vitamins and fats are contained. Milling/crushing/grinding is what breaks that bran off, and will make the endosperm (starches and enzymes) available to be dissolved into the water. If that bran is still there, everything will be trapped inside.

  • The enzymes I mentioned, you would add them before pitching (adding) the yeast, to help break down the starches in the grains. I would specifically add them at the 150F (65C) mark, that is within the safe temperatures for both of them. Glucoamylase will start to denature at 158F (70C), and alpha-amylase will start to denature at around 161F (72C), and if you didn't know, denatured enzymes (proteins) don't work anymore.

    ====

    I do my mashing in a 5gal stainless steel pot, and I do my fermenting in these 5gal buckets (foodsafe from Home Depot). I use these lids, as it has an extendable spout which is the perfect diameter for a No. 7 size drilled rubber stopper, which I stick the airlock in.

    For the actual mashing process. I do the following. So, not far off from what you do, except the starting temperature, since going above 161F can damage some of your enzymes and slow things down. These steps haven't failed me yet.

  • Heat the water up to 158F (70C)
  • Add grains when it's at that temp or slightly below it.
  • Let it cool down to 150F (65C), and hold it there for an 1h to 1.5h. But it has to stay at ~150F the entire time.
  • Pull out the grains (which are in a brew bag, mentioned below).
  • I personally do an iodine test at this point, before moving on to cooling. To see if there are any starches left over. If there is still starch, and I haven't added enzymes already, I will add enzymes, 1/2tsp each (alpha and gluco), and I'll hold it at 150F for another 30min.
  • I let mine cool down to between 70F (20C) and 75F (24C), depending on the room temp. You can use an immersion chiller if you have one (I made mine, explanation below), or an ice bath, if you want to speed up cooling it down from 150F to 75F.
  • Then pitch the yeast.

    I mix up the yeast culture as soon as I hit the 150F temp of the mash, by pouring the yeast (1tbsp) into 2cups of warm water with a pinch of sugar, a pinch of DAP (aka diammonium phosphate), and a pinch of Magnesium sulfate (aka epsom salt, I bought at walmart in a large jug). Then I just let it sit while the yeast rehydrates and starts doing it's thing. When the mash is down to around 80F, I pour that mash into a sanitized 5gal bucket, then when it hits between 75F to 70F, I pour the yeast mix into the mash in the bucket, close the lid, put in the stopper+airlock, and leave it alone for about 3 days, before I check on it.

    When I check on it, if it has slowed down significantly, or is stuck. I do the following:

  1. I will check the temp, and warm/cool it if needed to get it back to between 70F (20C) and 75F (24C).
  2. If the temp isn't off, I will check pH, if it's between 5 and 5.5, everything is good, if not I use citric acid (pull it down) or calcium carbonate (pull it up) to fix pH. Closer to 5 is better than closer to 5.5, ideally 5.2 to 5.5 is the best. Some people will use oyster shells and add them before pitching yeast, to act as a pH buffer. It does work, since they are essentially made up of calcium carbonate. I'd recommend soaking in water+bleach (10% solution, 10mL bleach, 90mL water) for 30min then rinsing under tap water, then letting them dry out, if you go this route, to make sure any bacteria are dead. Then you can put them in the ferment bucket in their own small brew bag, under the big brew bag, or in one of those stainless steel tea strainers, so you don't need to fish them out of the grains/trub afterwards which is a pain in the ass. Ideally, by the end of the ferment, if you don't want to distill it right away (within a few days), you can let the pH drop as low as 4, to stave off any bacterial infection.
  3. If pH is fine, it usually means there isn't enough nutrients, so I will put in 1/2tsp of DAP, and 1/2tsp of Magnesium sulfate, for 5gal that is. Might have to adjust pH after adding those.

    That usually accounts for all the stuck fermentation issues.

    ===

  • For my immersion chiller. I use a 72" length of uncoated corrugated stainless steel tubing I bought from Houzz, and then I bought a faucet to garden hose adapter, and 2 of these 3/4" NPT to garden hose adapters. So it goes Sink faucet > faucet adapter > garden hose > hose to NPT adapter > CSST > hose to NPT adapter > garden hose > tub drain. There are other ways to do it, but I had the CSST already just laying around unused. You could probably just buy a piece of copper pipe, bend it into a coil, stretch rubber tubing over each end, and then stretch one end over the faucet, and let the other end hang over the sink/tub drain. I prefer the immersion chiller to the ice bath, or just waiting around.

  • I also don't know if you have what's called a brew bag, but it makes handling the grains easier. You put the bag in the bucket, then fill the bucket with your water, then pour the grains into the bag/bucket. Then when you are done, and want to take the grains out, you just lift out the bag, let it drain, you can squeeze the bag, or do whats call lautering where you pour water through it (you can put the bag in a large colander if you want to lauter), and voila. A lot easier than without the bag, and having to scoop all the grains out. This is the one I have, you can see what I was describing in the photos.

  • Some people like to do what is called distilling "on grain", where they will pour the entire mash, with some grains or all the grains, into the distillation boiler. But if you aren't using a jacketed boiler, you run the risk of burning the grains, which adds an acrid taste and can ruin things. I don't do this, I use an immersion heater in my boiler, so I distill "off grain", as I use the brew bag and pull the grains out before doing into the boiler.

  • For controlling the mashing temperatures, I use a Sous Vide cooker that I own for cooking, it can go between 32F and 210F. Tons of them on Amazon these days, and with a bit of aluminum door screen around the openings to keep the big grains out, benefit of the sous vide is it will heat and stir for you. If it's too expensive for you now, Amazon always has deals on them for Black Friday/Cyber Monday, or for Xmas. But you can just keep adding hot water and stirring periodically as the temp drops, I've done that before too. Or you can use a hot plate, which I have also done. I've never used the stove top (electric), or a gas burner, but I imagine it's possible to do with that as well, but probably a bit more difficult. Whatever floats your boat, and works for you.

    ===

    Hope this helps!
u/Indian_villager · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

GIT GUD SON!

Seriously, attention to detail will drive your beer from ok to good.
Control will take it to great.

Water: This is most of your beer, if your water sucks your beer will suck. At the least use a carbon filter or campden tabs to kill the chlorine/chloramines coming through from the tap. Below are links to a filter setup. Plumb the outlet to 1/4" OD tubing. This will slow down the flow a lot. Slower flow = better contact time = better water. Get this much done on the cheap, if you want to play with RO and pH do it later. Get this level of consistency down first.


Filter body: https://www.amazon.com/Hydronix-HF3-10CLWH34PR-Housing-Pressure-Relief/dp/B01CFOGH32/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1494856726&sr=8-4&keywords=10%22+filter+body


Filter:https://www.amazon.com/DuPont-WFPFC8002-Universal-2-Phase-Cartridge/dp/B007JRDT96/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1494856764&sr=8-2&keywords=dupont+carbon+filter


Make sure you are getting a good boil. Target 1gal/hour of boiloff. This will help your drive off undesirable compounds in the wort and up your hop utilization.


Hops: Make sure they are fresh, frozen, and under vacuum (if you can't manage vacuum double ziplock making sure to push out as much air as possible)


Yeast: Manage your pitch rates, use the calculator over at brewunited. If you don't have the resources to manage yeast starters stick to dry yeast and learn how to rehydrate them. More and more strains are emerging on the dry market and the dry yeast offers a great deal of consistency.


Ferm Temp: This one will make you a hero. This one is not as expensive as it seems. It is May, dorm fridges should be flooding CL, snatch one up for cheap, pick up an ITC-308 from amazon for a temp controller, and also pick up a 17W seedling heat mat. If you are careful all this could be had for less than $100.


Post Ferm: Once the beer is done fermenting minimize contact with oxygen. Since you are focusing on pale ales reducing the oxygen contact with the wort will easily improve your quality. Check out the sterile siphon starter over at brulosophy and note how they have it directly hooked up to the keg post instead of dropping the tube through the open top.

Feel free to PM me if you have further questions.

u/astangl42 · 2 pointsr/BuyItForLife

This. After having so many of the zinc nozzles split open, it's nice to have something decent that feels like it will last forever.

I would combine it with a nice ball shutoff valve, ideally this one. Not cheap, but it'll probably outlast you and you'll feel good using it. (E.g., nice big solid brass handle -- compare to crappy plastic knob on Gilmour shutoff, painted to look like brass, that you know is eventually going to crack & fall off.) Check out the Amazon reviews.

If you ever get an opportunity to get a "water breaker" (basically the head off a watering wand, which is exactly how I got mine -- look for people throwing these out; head is probably still fine, just unscrew), this makes a good addition. You can screw this on to your shutoff instead of the brass valve and get a nice gentle spray onto newly planted beds or other delicate plants, while at the same time delivering lots of water.

u/Rithe · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

I am thinking of buying a nitro tank and regulator so that I could add the ability to brew up a Nitrogen Stout, but before I do this I want to make sure I understand the process

In another thread I saw people saying that the best way to do it was to force carb the beer to your desired Co2 level (lower than normal), then switch to the beer-gas and crank the PSI up to 25-30 and serve through a tap with a restrictor plate. Since I have an intertap setup I was going to buy this and use it. Does that sound correct so far?

Assuming that will work, my question is if I am trying to get a specific Co2 volume in my beer, say ~1.8lbs, is there a way I can calculate this based on PSI force carbing time? I'm not sure exactly how to math out how to aim for a specific Co2 volume. I normally force carb at 30PSI for 2-days like most people, and my Keezer is 38degrees if temperature matters

Thanks for any help

EDIT: I found this pdf by Northern Brewer and on page 2 it has a chart, and it says around 5 PSI for force carbonation and those temperatures. But it doesn't list a time, is it correct and is it 2-days, 2 weeks?

u/digital_end · 3 pointsr/wholesomememes

I had one and it was great! Got it as a joke, but it quickly became a legitimate thing I used a lot. It makes getting a sip of water after brushing your teeth easy, totally recommended.

Here it is on amazon.

https://www.amazon.com/JOKARI-Jokari-Whale-Faucet-Fountain/dp/B0019TUKV0/

And if you're looking for a fancier one, I recently replaced my whale with this;

https://www.amazon.com/Kwik-Brass-Faucet-Attachment-Fountain/dp/B00CH4TYXQ/

The cool thing about that is that it works like a normal faucet normally, but you pull the little thing on the side out to swap it to a fountain. And after you turn off the water, the button automatically goes back in so you don't spray yourself in the face tomorrow, haha

u/Crossswampfast · 13 pointsr/AsianBeauty

When I wash my face, water runs down my arms, it splashes out of the sink and it goes everywhere. I laid towels around the basin, stood on a bath mat... And I was still getting water everywhere. Which means eventually, my bathroom cabinet was going to warp or the subfloor would get damaged. (Which is actually a problem we already have had, from the previous owner having the same problem.)

This turns out to be an engineering problem. My face is above the faucet because I'm taller than the sink. The water flows downwards because the faucet points downwards. I have to scoop water in my hands upwards to my face, but my hands are not great scoops, and most of the leakage/splashing is draining down my forearms. By redirecting the water, I can keep my hands mostly out of the equation and limit the splash/leakage.

My sibling has a Jokari Whale Faucet Fountain for my niblings when they're brushing their teeth. It just slips onto the faucet and creates a bubbler. It tolerates warm water well, comes off easily -- very useful for shared spaces -- and is easy to clean. I turn on the faucet, then just lean my face into the stream to rinse.

And for six bucks, I no longer have water everywhere!

u/rjeffords · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

I second buying a Perlick. I bought a kegerator on CL and cleaned the hell out of it, but it still had a cheap faucet on it. It poured ok but everyday it got sticky and was hard to engage the first few times per day. Don't even waste your time trying to clean the original faucet. Just get a Perlick and be done with it. <$30: https://amzn.com/B0063G7DIM

Obviously replace ALL hoses (co2 and liquid) as well as clamps. That should be less than $10-12. I have a $10 fridge thermometer that works well, but it's not a necessity. Toss a baking soda fridge pack in there as well to handle any smells.

u/garfi3ld · 1 pointr/Plumbing

Thanks for the follow up, I'm most likely going to pull it out and just replace that last section.

I hadn't bought anything yet, I was basically looking to find a flange that might fit. I think one of the clamp on cast iron flanges might work but after pricing out a full replacement again (with PVC not ABS this time) the price difference isn't really worth the time I'm putting into trying to get around the replacement.

What I was looking at though were the PVC push in designs, had the ID fit. Or this style https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001REGQXI

But I have help coming to help pull out that heavy cast iron tomorrow to get started on this. Also planning on starting drywall this week as well if time allows, can't wait to at least have walls back up

u/JessieAMorris · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

Fair enough. Is a flange like this not good enough? I've heard great things about this flange and figured that'd work well until we redo the bathroom.

I think I'll probably keep the pipe and do everything else about like you said. Also, would using plywood on top to bring the flange flush to the tile work or should it be mortar?

u/pkb4112 · 1 pointr/homeowners

Not sure if this will help your situation or not, but a few weeks ago I pulled a toilet out and the flange was super rusted but glued into the drain pipe so I didn't want to start messing with it. I saw this ( https://www.amazon.com/10672X-HydroSeat-Durable-Toilet-Flange/dp/B00KBBAN5K/ref=sr_1_9?keywords=toilet+flange+repair&qid=1566179731&s=gateway&sr=8-9 ) at home depot and gave it a shot and so far it's been working really well - basically takes the old flange out of the equation and can make it easier for non-plumbers to make a repair.

u/nreyes238 · 1 pointr/fountainpens

Just today I am carrying my Vista modded to an eyedropper. You would love it!

u/I_hate_kids_too · 2 pointsr/DIY

Since you said you're interested:


After many hours of research and planning, I have concluded the cheapest, and, strangely enough, easiest solution for a basic setup, assuming you are starting with nothing, is simply to get one of these. Unscrew the aerator from the kitchen faucet, screw on that part, and attach the water hose to the other end.


Again, assuming you're starting with nothing like me, all parts combined when going with other solutions would cost approximately $40 and up, including using 3/8 tubing and fittings. And that's for the absolute bare bones food safe setup.


I didn't have a garden hose, so that was the most costly expense. I decided to go with this one. Those two parts put me at $24 and some change, plus another $7 for shipping. For about another 50 cents, which would put me over the $25 total, I could get free shipping. So I got some desoldiering wick.


Total project cost: $27.xx


Estimated time to install: About 5 minutes (rounding up for estimated time spent goofing off)


Final note: There were several people reporting sharp edges on that adapter. If you get it, my advice is to wear thick leather gloves, and attach the adapter to the hose first. Then wrap it in several layers of duct tape so when you need to attach/detach it from the faucet, you won't need gloves and it won't cut up your hands.

u/sticky-bit · 1 pointr/camping

marry a weed sprayer with a sink sprayer

Assemble the brand new never used weed sprayer, but instead of using the wand, splice in a sink sprayer.

Heat water on the stove to about 110 °F, pour it in the sprayer and pump it up. You will probably want a wash cloth for this and a draft free environment. Maybe a second bucket of warm water to wash with, leaving you most of the spray to rinse off with, but it's optional.

You need to take a navy shower with this rig, but it will get you clean.

If you use this in the cabin's shower stall you'll have to get some RV antifreeze to pour into the plumbing traps before you leave.

u/Trey_Antipasto · 1 pointr/DIY

Thanks for the input. I do plan on using one of those repair flanges. I am hoping to find a wax ring with some sort of flexible flange/gasket. That will give me a little hope of sealing it property.

Something like this one maybe

u/freewaytrees · 2 pointsr/PlantedTank

Pretty sure this is what you're after

LDR 530 2050 Faucet to Hose or Aerator Adapter Lead Free https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BHZLR4K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_mVAKzbPBW7GZP

u/bekahboo1989 · 32 pointsr/WhitePeopleTwitter

Here you are. Years ago Chick-fil-A gave away something like this in their kid meals. We used it for years. These things are honestly pretty handy.

u/s0rce · 2 pointsr/HomeImprovement

edit, do you mean 3/8" nominal Cu pipe or 3/8" OD Cu tube?

You can likely use something like this for 3/8" OD Cu tube.

http://www.amazon.com/00084-060604-Compression-Tee-Reducing/dp/B00C04VY40/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1452542194&sr=8-4&keywords=3%2F8+1%2F4+reducing+tee+compression

then use a small piece of 1/4 tubing to connect the reducing tee to a valve

http://www.amazon.com/LASCO-17-0995-4-Inch-Compression-Brass/dp/B008E33VA6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1452542253&sr=8-1&keywords=1%2F4+compression+valve

If for some reason you have lots of money and want nicer products you can pick these up from Swagelok or McMaster-Carr instead of generic stuff from Amazon.

I think a 3/8" Cu pipe has an OD of 1/2" So you can just get a 1/2" compression fitting and use that instead of the 3/8" fitting:

http://www.amazon.com/Aviditi-90809-2-Inch-Compression-Reducing/dp/B00AZEOUBG/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1452542716&sr=8-2&keywords=1%2F4+1%2F2+compression+reducing+tee

u/redlotusaustin · 4 pointsr/homeautomation

You could do things like you're planning but I would add in a water-valve to cut the water in addition to the power (you want to cut both so the washer doesn't run while it's dry). I would also use Home Assistant instead of IFTTT, since it will be faster and won't rely on your internet being up to work. If you go with ZWave device, you'll need some kind of hub, which Home Assistant can act as (with a ZWave USB stick).

However, unless you want to tie this particular issue into a large home automation system (getting text messages when the leak sensor is triggered for example), you might be better off with something like this, which is an all-in-one system for exactly your use-case: https://www.amazon.com/Automatic-Detector-Shut-Off-Stopping-Detection/dp/B0742N3KHF/

Personally, I'd go with that kit, otherwise you're looking at:

u/Suvalis · 1 pointr/Plumbing

Thanks! I think you may have put me on the right track. I went to the front hydrant and it had a different top, which tells me the back had been replaced before. It said Mansfield.

So I found this

https://www.prier.com/images/stories/documents/documents/Mansfield%20Stem%20ID%20Flyer.pdf

Looks like series 400 or 500 hydrant.

So I THINK this is what I need.

https://www.amazon.com/Prier-630-7500-Vacuum-Breaker-Service/dp/B00164C5IO/ref=sr_1_1?crid=31OZ7N0SI11GP&keywords=prier+630-7500+vacuum+breaker+service+parts+kit&qid=1562258968&s=gateway&sprefix=Prier+630%2Caps%2C127&sr=8-1

That being said, the white plastic piece looks a little different from the one I took a picture of..

u/surgeandoj · 36 pointsr/gadgets

Something like this has been around forever, I had one as a kid. It works great.

u/Konfigs · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

I'm a big fan of these ones. They are a squishy foam and work great. Totally reusable.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005K89RQU/

u/Cane_Skretteburg · 2 pointsr/Plumbing

these are old leaded flanges, my experience with cast iron and leaded flanges is rather limited due to my age and region. but the best way would be to replace the lead with newer cast iron if that's possible, or buy new flange plates that bolt to the existing floor.
this is a cast iron toilet flange that are much newer and the standard for cast iron applications :http://amzn.com/B001REGQXI
and this is more of a temporary flange you can use to repair what you have that will bolt to the floor: http://amzn.com/B000FHBGEC

u/Junkmans1 · 3 pointsr/Plumbing

Very easy 2 minute repair.

Pull off the metal cap on top which covers the vacuum breaker. It pulls straight off - might need a pliers. There will be a plastic piece that you need to tighten a little I think with a Phillips screwdriver.

If that doesn’t fix it then you need a new vacuum breaker kit called a Prier Mansfield Breaker Repair Kit model 630-7500 that has a replacement for the inside plastic pieces.. Runs under $10 and most hardware stores sell them.

https://www.amazon.com/Prier-630-7500-Breaker-Service-Original/dp/B00164C5IO

u/t0x1k_x · 4 pointsr/Plumbing

You will need to remove your aerator and replace it with a 15/16 thread x make hose thread faucet adapter.

Like this one.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00BHZLR4K/ref=dp_ob_neva_mobile

From there you can leave that on and install a new aerator on that too allow for easy switch outs.

u/Wyo-Patriot · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Any major difference between these faucets and these ones? It looks like the cheaper ones are 525's. Are they just as good at not sticking?

u/fishtrl · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

I had a brewing buddy do a lot of research on this. Nitro beer's gas is 25% CO2/ 75% N. He charged the kegs at 30psi. Here is the important part. Nitrogen wants to stay in solution unlike CO2 so you have to dispense it though an faucet for nitrogen. You can DIY by rigging a stout intertap to a faucet with hose and clamps (See link) or just buy the whole faucet. There is a screen will small holes that the beer rushes though forcing the nitrogen out giving you that creamy cascade of bubbles.

https://www.amazon.com/Strange-Brew-D1213-Intertap-Stout/dp/B01MS1N42U/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=Intertap+Stout+Spout&qid=1556908067&s=gateway&sr=8-1

u/kodaif · 1 pointr/Plumbing

I recently purchased this Moen handle to replace my current knob. I realized today that the new handle does not fit the cartilage due to the size difference. Do I have to replace the cartilage with a cartilage that is compatible with the Moen handle (Moen 1225 Cartilage) and if so will it be easy to do?

Pictures of new and old handle: https://imgur.com/a/X2XmDxt

Thank you!

u/CVGBs · 1 pointr/CampingandHiking

Ha, I know what you mean about the Aluminum tape. It just doesn't hold up as well as duct tape. I stuck with the aluminum, but covered it up with some gaffers tape.

I'm also considering switching to an outdoor faucet cover, particularly for shorter trips. It's much more voluminous but weighs <1 oz and is supposed to insulate much better.

u/theunderscoreguy · 1 pointr/WTF

They have I have seen them before in a resaturant or bar or something (I was drinking so it was the best thing ever for a good while), but I just gave a quick look and they have similar thing on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Hands-Toilet-Flusher-Pedal-Adapter/dp/B0018RVWZ6

u/ouroborosity · 1 pointr/wheredidthesodago

I'm pretty sure this is a whole lot cheaper, and we've used them for years.

u/jamuraa · 1 pointr/pics

I have this alternative to that. It works great! I don't have to have a skeevy cup in my bathroom to rinse after brushing anymore.

u/datmyusername · 1 pointr/SkincareAddiction

I had this when I was a kid. As far as I remember, it works pretty well.

u/a_girl · 1 pointr/AskReddit

They can be, for $10. That's what we have and it's awesome.

u/TheDubbiestDubberz · 6 pointsr/vaporents

The glass ones do get kinda loose. I bought the wooden stems. You can also get an o-ring that will hold the loose ones tighter. This is how I fixed my Arizer Solo stems from being too loose for $10

First off, here are the O-Rings that I bought. $10 including shipping.

$3 from Home Depot http://www.homedepot.com/p/DANCO-10-O-Rings-10-Pack-96727/100232944#.UhusnBs3vuR

UPDATE: /u/Ericdoesntknow & /u/CrispyChipz have informed me that these O-Rings are for sale at Home Depot, and on top of that they're cheaper! If anyone has a link to them please send me the link, if I can remember to run to Home Depot I'll grab the UPC # and post that with a link .


Here are the pictures

  1. Uncrew the top cover

  2. Put your stem threw the cap and put the O-Ring on the opposite side (See picture #2)

  3. Push the stem into the heating element (?) so the O-Ring will stay in place while you screw the top back on (See picture #3)

  4. Enjoy your solo! As you can see in picture 4, you can barely even see the O-Ring inside!

    Let me know if you have any questions.

    http://www.reddit.com/r/vaporents/comments/1eyvo0/this_is_how_i_fixed_my_arizer_solo_stems_from/
u/hi_lampworking · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

Your pic looks a lot like my basement and we have a valve on the inside for the backyard faucet

We don't have an accessible valve for our front-yard faucet so we use a cover like this http://www.amazon.com/Frost-King-FC1-Outdoor-Faucet/dp/B001FG3C1C/

u/idlehand · 1 pointr/Plumbing

I just looked, the bolts go under the subfloor, and it's pretty tight.
https://i.imgur.com/ls9tjvy.jpg
It's even tighter on the other side, unfortunately. Should I consider one of the flanges that you can put on top of the current flange, like this? Or wouldn't that solve my issue? Looks as if I could shave off the current bolts and then put that on top.

u/Speedy_Panda · 1 pointr/Plumbing

Thanks, that's exactly what I did. Purchased a repair kit on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00164C5IO/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/AcidicNature · 1 pointr/StandingDesk

Fully extend the legs in the up position.

Apply some lubricating grease - lightly.

Use something similar to this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000DZFUPC

Lower and raise a few times. See if that helps.

If it doesn't work, Ryan is always stalking the forum and can sell you a new frame.

P.S. Also, don't just google "lubricant". At least not from work.

u/automate_the_things · 1 pointr/homeautomation

There's Water Cop, which looks pretty decent: https://www.amazon.com/WaterCop-Z-Wave-Shut-Off-Actuator-Prevention/dp/B07C91B69P

I'll probably pick that one up myself when I get around to doing some plumbing here in a month or two.

u/ComradDakota · 9 pointsr/ElectricForest

I posted this the other day but a Reddit user suggested I paint it black to have it absorb more heat so I figured I'd post up the finished product. If anyone is interested here's the materials I used, just cut the rubber hose attached to a new clean insecticide sprayer, attach adapter, put on your hose and boom, camp shower with fairly decent water pressure.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B002SAO7XQ/ref=yo_ii_img?ie=UTF8&psc=1

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B001GZZFXA/ref=yo_ii_img?ie=UTF8&psc=1

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0039EEN0M/ref=yo_ii_img?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/frugal_lothario · 1 pointr/DIY

Note the 1 star reviews. That would be my luck.

u/overstable · 1 pointr/StLouis

I spent some time in a mobile home where the plumbing is not well insulated. The pipes, especially the outdoor faucets, are susceptible to freezing unless additional measures are taken. We would cover the outdoor faucets with a foam cover for insulation, and use heat tape. The latter plugs into an electric outlet and has a thermostat to know when it needs to turn on to heat the pipe and keep it from freezing.

Those two items would provide decent protection at a reasonable price, but it wouldn't cost a ton to have a plumber replace the outside faucet with a length of pipe going into the basement where the shutoff valve would be more easily accessible. This is your permanent solution...

u/boyrahett · -1 pointsr/Plumbing

in addition to the other comments which I agree with. If the flange is set to low, the top of the flange is flush with the finished floor, consider using a foam seal.

https://smile.amazon.com/Sani-BL01-Waxless-Toilet-Gasket/dp/B005K89RQU/ref=sr_1_11?crid=103A0VGTP9JFY&keywords=sani+seal&qid=1570785552&sprefix=sani+seal%2Caps%2C129&sr=8-11

u/ithrow6s · 6 pointsr/fountainpens

I agree, I've used this thicker silicone grease for all my eyedropper conversions.

u/peachskylines · -1 pointsr/vancouverwa

Are you thinking of those things that are connected to your sink to rinse things that are too big to fit completely under the faucet?

This is what I am imagining:

Kohler GP1021724-CP Sidespray for Kitchen Faucets, Chrome Finish https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001GZZFXA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_e44Czb5VBKPJV

u/I-do-not-like-this · 3 pointsr/Plumbing

Looks like a Proper/Mansfield sillcock that needs a new vacuum breaker, the parts are less than $10.


https://www.amazon.com/Prier-630-7500-Vacuum-Breaker-Service/dp/B00164C5IO

u/OGTK423 · 1 pointr/hotas

Looks like it's sold out in a lot of places.

Would this Danco 88693 Silicone Grease work?

u/steve_steve · 1 pointr/Plumbing

I would replace that with an inline brass compression valve (with the water off, obviously). Make sure that fridge side has plenty of tubing for pulling it in & out.

u/kryzchek · 7 pointsr/Buffalo

I shut off the water going to the outside hose bibs and cover them with one of those styrofoam covers. The screen in the front door is replaced with the glass insert and I make sure all of the windows are shut tight and locked. The winter equipment is swapped with the summer stuff in the shed, and that's about it.

u/stague · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

Yeah, they sell foam domes that attach to your hose bib and insulate it against the cold.

u/icedbergs · 5 pointsr/AsianBeauty

I can't find the original thread right now, but someone recommended this for this issue: https://www.amazon.com/JOKARI-Jokari-Whale-Faucet-Fountain/dp/B0019TUKV0

u/captintucker · 1 pointr/vaporents

[Here] (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001HOEU5Y/ref=oh_details_o05_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1)

It looks like its not available anymore, but you just need to search yourself and find this exact same O-ring.

u/jmysl · 3 pointsr/Homebrewing

I bought one of those, but my threads are buried in the faucet, so the flange on the one i got prevents me from using it! do you know of one that is a bit longer? FTR i got this one https://www.amazon.com/LDR-530-2050-Aerator-Adapter/dp/B00BHZLR4K/

u/chewychubacca · 1 pointr/fountainpens

I've been using this stuff, from Amazon:

https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B000DZFUPC/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1

(Danco 88693 Silicone Grease, $3.37)

u/Erdmann701 · 4 pointsr/arizer

Heres some from planet vape.

Here is some from Amazon if you would rather go that way.

or here is some from home depot (which is carried at most stores)

u/coachhoach · 1 pointr/lawncare

If you want a buy-it-for-life shut-off valve, the Dramm brass valve is the way to go:

https://www.amazon.com/Dramm-114960-036434-Heavy-Duty-Shut-Off/dp/B000HHQAQY/

Just don't drop it on your bare feet or there will be lots of cursing.

u/KaiserW_XBL · 2 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Instead of wax ring, I recommend this:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005K89RQU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_t1_AVfNBbJ25ZBK4

This way if you miss-align it at all, you won’t risk not having a full seal.

u/Ass_Explosion · 5 pointsr/Plumbing

Moen (that is a Moen Chateau shower valve) makes a one and two inch stem extension kit for shower valves using a 1225 cartridge, they also make an adapter kit so you can use new trim with older valves; replace your cartridge while you are at it. When looking for new trim, search "Moentrol trim" on Google.


https://www.amazon.com/Moen-137347-Handle-Extension-Kit/dp/B001DO6TZC


https://www.amazon.com/Moen-145058-Adapter-Kit/dp/B002C59VTC/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8



https://www.amazon.com/Moen-1225-One-Handle-Cartridge-Replacement/dp/B0006290R6




https://www.moen.com/customer-support/faq

u/Daefish · 1 pointr/kegerators

Do you know if I can upgrade the handles I have to tap handles or are they threaded differently? Would I need an entirely different tower to put them on or can I just replace?

This is what I have

I wouldn't mind moving to these or something similar

u/NewkTownTN · 2 pointsr/Plumbing

I've been selling a lot of these since I brought them in.

u/BexterV · 1 pointr/pics

or here for four dollars less! #

u/YoshiKoshi · 1 pointr/SkincareAddiction

I use something similar to this. The water comes up the way it does at a water fountain. I can wet and rinse my face without getting water everywhere.
http://smile.amazon.com/Jokari-US-5013-Whale-Faucet-Fountain/dp/B0019TUKV0/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1451980618&sr=8-2&keywords=faucet+fountain

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/WTF

A 0.28 second Google Search would have shown you they have...

u/sgregg21 · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

GAME CHANGER

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BHZLR4K/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Connect this to a faucet in your hose (preferably the sink by the tub, so you can drain there) and connect your hose connection on the wort chiller tubing to it.

u/Themanateher · 2 pointsr/Plumbing

If he already has a 1/4" copper line add one of these valves on it than a short piece of copper than a 1/4" compression Union than a refrigerator flex all done

http://www.usplastic.com/mobile/item.aspx?sku=58305&gclid=coijvmtn_80cfqgoaqodjj4g6q


Or this compression valve on the copper than a refrigerator flex from the valve to the fridge

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B008E33VA6/ref=pd_aw_sim_60_3?ie=UTF8&dpID=411vX%2Bz8GDL&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL100_SR100%2C100_&psc=1&refRID=0N8EMNKP16V290SCHRW2

u/aidapng · 1 pointr/Flowtoys

Silicone lubricant is the way to go! I purchased this one.

u/v-work · 3 pointsr/HomeImprovement

I actually just ordered this for a utility sink in my basement.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008M6KFD6

u/0110010001100010 · 9 pointsr/HomeImprovement

I suppose I should have done that initially, lol.

3x - https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B007VZ2O0Q/

1x - https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B007JRDT96/

1x - https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B007IJ1GVI/

1x - https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B007VZ2O1U/

Then just whatever copper/PVC/PEX fittings you need to make it happen. I guess a bit over $100 but the filters drive that cost up a little and last ~3 months each so each pack is a half years worth.

I plumbed mine with a bypass too so I could bypass the filters for maintenance or if I had problems of if I'm doing a lot of outside watering (power washing).

EDIT: Pic here https://imgur.com/7ukQ9p4.jpg

u/ThaDelio · 3 pointsr/Plumbing

That's a Moen shower cartridge. It's either going to be a Posi-Temp cartridge or a single handle cartridge. The set clip is what you see pictured at the front of the valve where you see kind of a raised piece on the top front of the valve. Shut the entire house water off before removing said clip, then you need what's usually called a "Moen Tool" in our trade. Moen 104421 Cartridge Puller for 1200, 1222 and 1225 Single Handle Cartridges https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00083EC6C/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_pZqbzb2N5HVJA
Pull that sucker out and match the cartridge at a box store.
I assume the cartridge would be this one. Moen 1225 One-Handle Bathroom Faucet Cartridge Replacement, 8.5 x 2.5 x 1-Inch, Brass https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0006290R6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_t0qbzbB59YRF0
Best of advice if you don't know much, call a plumber. Could save you a headache and a bunch of wasted time, or possibly a ruined shower valve. Shouldn't be more than a $150 fix.

u/m0nsterhuntr · 3 pointsr/HomeImprovement

They make adapters to do exactly what you're looking for. It requires removal of the aerator on your faucet and then screwing the new adapter on on. Here's a link to one on Amazon.

https://www.amazon.com/Multi-Thread-Garden-Adapter-Female-10513/dp/B008M6KFD6/ref=sr_1_9?crid=B1MW83MF9BEW&keywords=faucet+to+hose+adapter&qid=1563902791&s=gateway&sprefix=faucet+to+hose%2Caps%2C158&sr=8-9

u/kabir424 · 2 pointsr/BuyItForLife

Buy this Dramm shutoff valve and this Dramm water breaker nozzle and you will be golden. I used this on a farm where they had them for many many years of heavy use. The shutoff valve is heavy brass with a stainless steel ball valve. You will have these for the rest of your life.

EDIT: I don't work on that farm anymore but I have 2 sets of what I have linked above at my house. One for the hose in the front of the house and one for the back of the house. I wouldn't live without them. I also have a number of friends who have purchased this at my suggestion and are so damn happy not to have to keep replacing their crappy nozzles.

u/manyamile · 1 pointr/gardening

This is what we use at the greenhouse/nursery where I work to solve that problem:

https://www.amazon.com/Dramm-12353-Heavy-Duty-Brass-Shut-Off/dp/B000HHQAQY

Attach it to your hose end and then attach the water dispenser of your choice to the end.

u/Qwertyz13 · 1 pointr/BabyBumps

DANCO Multi-Thread Garden Hose Adapter for Male to Male and Female to Male, Chrome, 1-Pack (10513) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M6KFD6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_lxD5CbBNCCHWR

I use this to fill up the kids’ splash pool. Maybe it could work? Depends on your sink.

Otherwise, I’ve taken a big pitcher and slowly filled it. Not fun!

u/blbd · 2 pointsr/Plumbing

Just clean it, spraypaint it, and cover it with one of these:

https://www.amazon.com/Frost-King-FC1-Outdoor-Faucet/dp/B001FG3C1C

They're cheap as hell from every hardware store and they'll keep the weather from screwing up the connection.