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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2009
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    tasmania
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    17

    Default Ancient shower taps through masonry block wall

    My taps in an old shower might be 50+ years old. They require a square tube spanner to remove. I cannot get in to measure the square at the base. I want to make a tube spanner to remove these taps. Can you tell me what size tube spanner might fit please?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Bendigo
    Age
    60
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    272

    Default

    24mm is fairly common but there are 25 and 29mm as well

    6pc Tap tube spanner set Square and Hex plumbers kit - Robson'''s Tool King Store

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Nimmitabel, Canberra
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    73
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    329

    Default

    Why make one when they are available to buy?

    I have a unit that I believe is about 50 years old. The taps needed a square tube socket to remove. I went to Mitre 10 and bought a suitable spanner which included a 24 mm sq on one end and 21 mm hex on the other end. The square end fitted and I got the tap off. The lever bar was only 100 mm long. I had to grab a spanner to wrap around the bar in order to get some extra leverage in order to get it off.

    The washer I fitted (from Mitre 10) split after about a month. You might be better off going to a plumbing shop for everything.

    Those old taps are so easy to clean up. You can separate (unscrew) the shaft from the tap body easily enough and clean it (I used steel wool and rubbed the shaft gently), replace the o-ring, lube it up and pop it all back together (or just buy a new tap, but if you do, the dimensions might not be the same).

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2013
    Location
    Geelong
    Posts
    414

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    Why make one when they are available to buy?

    I have a unit that I believe is about 50 years old. The taps needed a square tube socket to remove. I went to Mitre 10 and bought a suitable spanner which included a 24 mm sq on one end and 21 mm hex on the other end. The square end fitted and I got the tap off. The lever bar was only 100 mm long. I had to grab a spanner to wrap around the bar in order to get some extra leverage in order to get it off.

    The washer I fitted (from Mitre 10) split after about a month. You might be better off going to a plumbing shop for everything.

    Those old taps are so easy to clean up. You can separate (unscrew) the shaft from the tap body easily enough and clean it (I used steel wool and rubbed the shaft gently), replace the o-ring, lube it up and pop it all back together (or just buy a new tap, but if you do, the dimensions might not be the same).
    what he said and once the water is turned off turn the shower tap “on” to make it easy to undo.
    cheers

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    tasmania
    Posts
    17

    Default

    Thankyou to all who helped me.

    The job has now been carried out.

    The reason I did not seek to buy a tube spanner was that I live 40km from town, and secondly, having checked out ebay, I was pretty sure that the tube spanners on ebay would not have been long enough. Our little house was built in the 1950's I think, by a bricklayer who built it for himself as a holiday shack by the beach. Construction is double brick cavity wall, with plumbing located in the cavity. The combination arrangement is located in the cavity, and this required taps of amasing (to me) length. By trial and error I managed to determine that the square spanner base on the taps was one inch, so I made up a long tube spanner from four lengths of 25 X 5 flat steel.
    Hopefully I can add a photo here
    By the way, I spent 14 years as a home handyman doing repairs for property managers in rental homes. I would have done thousands of leaking tap repairs, but never came across taps of this length. IMG_2170.jpg

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Bendigo
    Age
    60
    Posts
    272

    Default

    Good job,

    Wow never seen spindles like those before.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    back in Alberta for a while
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    69
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    9,953

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by droog View Post
    24mm is fairly common but there are 25 and 29mm as well

    6pc Tap tube spanner set Square and Hex plumbers kit - Robson'''s Tool King Store
    If the old taps are really 50 years old, they should be an imperial size, not metric.

    24mm would be a close match for 15/16"
    29mm a close match for 1-1/8"

    Given you can't get into the wall far enough to measure, I suggest you buy the correct size imperial tube spanner from a supplier who will allow you to return any wrong size ones.


    let us know how you get on
    regards from Alberta, Canada

    ian

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Woodstock (Cowra)
    Age
    75
    Posts
    3,200

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ian View Post
    let us know how you get on
    Ummm....post #5 Ian
    The person who never made a mistake never made anything

    Cheers
    Ray

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    back in Alberta for a while
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    69
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    9,953

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by rwbuild View Post
    [FONT=Verdana]

    Ummm....post #5 Ian
    My post crossed with yours



    thanks for the update
    regards from Alberta, Canada

    ian

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Nimmitabel, Canberra
    Age
    73
    Posts
    329

    Default

    It's a beauty. If there were a plumbers' museum, that tap should be one of the exhibits.

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