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Hi. Wanting to remove the very old spout as it broke on half and disintegrated like pewter. I had about 3cms of it protruding out from base just enough for pipe wrench. But as soon as I started to turn it disintegrated even more to now what you can see. It was so brittle. The pic from Bunnings is the style of the original and also what I bought to replace it.
Hi @bennyx13
Fisrt you need to unscrew that large ring on the wall. Usually they are not done up tight so use a pair of decent Multigrips to turn it anticlock wise.
Under the disk cover is a wall spout protruding through the wall usually with a hex end on it so a spanner of the right size can go on it. The new spout will screw onto this once the old one is off.
There is then the old broken spout also with a hex shaped nut on it usually.
So you will need to good fitting spanners on each hex nut. The hex nut at the wall dosnt turn dont try to turn it just use the spanner to hold it steady while you put pressure turn the spout side with other spanner anti clockwise. The holding spanner is used to counter act the force of the spout turning spanner.
When installing the new spout use some white teflon plumbers tape wrapped in a clock wise direction on the spout thread 12 turns as a guide to stop leaks into the wall.
Your new spout just screws on use 5 to 6 wraps of masking tape on the chrome spout (Maybye some extra card board over the jaws ) so you can use the multi grips to tighten the spout gently.
If the tape is loose screwing on use 20 turns of teflon tape. The tape flattens out and seals into the metal thread.
Hope this helps.
Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community @bennyx13. It's brilliant to have you join us, and many thanks for your question about removing a bath spout.
That's a bit of a pickle! It's going to be very difficult to remove the end flange of the bath spout now that it has snapped off. If the flange section has also deteriorated you might need to start destructively removing it and perhaps cutting into it and then prying away the pieces. If you can cut/break away the sides of the flange, then that might give you some surface area you can lock pliers onto and undo the rest.
This could be a job for a plumber, but I suspect they will struggle with this one, too.
Let me tag @Noyade, @Dave-1 and @Nailbag to see if they have any thoughts.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Mitchell
Morning @bennyx13
Ouch and a few more curses for you, I have struggled with removing cowls from old taps before and I and at least a little more to hold on to give me grip and turn.
Maybe drilling a hole a midway between the center and the edge of the tap base 6mm (thinking about it maybe a little bit closer to the edge then the center to give the best torque when tapping), then you could use a flat head steel shafted screwdriver (We use to call it a suicide screwdriver while working on electrical stuff but cant find teh actual name of it) and tap it counterclockwise (I think but always get it wrong) I was thinking along the lines of a large pinned circlip plier but dont know of any with that solid a nose. I have removed plenty of things this way, takes patience and gently tapping more then clobbering it. Plus a lot of crossing fingers
Have a search for a "Milwaukee 8mm Slotted Screwdriver" In google land and you will see what I am talking about.
Dave
Hi @bennyx13
I think every thread should have at least one photo and a crazy thought.
I have both.
Remove the taps to give yourself plenty of room.
If you're good with an angle grinder - cut two parallel 'half-moon' sections from the base - equal to a good sized shifter.
It'll either shatter or turn. I guess both outcomes would be good?
Cheers - please keep us updated.
Hi @Jewelleryrescue the disc on the plastic wall of the bath is all one piece that did include the spout. Exactly the same as the replacement in the pic that I bought. It’s also quite old and brittle. I can go at it with multi grips. But as it hasn’t even budged a few mm I’m worried I might bend copper inside behind the bath. Or the stem.
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