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Jun 6, 2020
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Hello, firstly is there a shroud which is fitted to this tap?
If there is I'm finding it very difficult to remove. It's a deva monobloc tap.

Read something simiar that a rubber strap wrench may be required, however need to ascertain if the tap has a collar(shroud) as it is very difficult to see a joint. However the material is plastic rather than brass as
It has chipped a little.
Thanks
Pisces
 

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Yes it has a shroud.

This will either screw off or pull off.

I have spent ages trying to unscrew one only to find it quite easily pulled straight off. Pull off ones are ‘held’ by an o-ring which can get gunked up and then holds tight.

In either case (screw or pull) it can be helpful to pour some very hot water over it to provide a thermal shock- need to wear rubber gloves to then turn it as metal will be too hot to touch.
 
Hi, got it off eventually. Sprayed wd 49 around exposed collar and left for 3 days.
Turned it anticlockwise with hand, wearing rubber gloves for grip, worked a treat.
 
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If you are talking about the Baby Boa straps, don't bother. I find the rubber strap is elastic and prevents you from being able to get a decent grip. If they used reinforced rubber, they would work better, but I suppose the advantage of stretchy rubber is that you can't break the tool, because it slips instead. As RPM has suggested, rubber gloves are better. (I actually have a special grippy cloth thing that used to be someone's grandmother's).
 
You mentioned a rubber strap in the first post.
Ric, some are better than others.
Agreed. I once had (on loan) a canvas strap wrench that was very very good. If you know of a good one, please do let me know as it is a tool I feel I'm missing. The only ones I've ever seen on sale are the rubber Boa ones, sadly, and I can grip better with my hands than with the one I have!
 
Hi I have another dripping hot tap.
Got the cover off but the nut holding the gland is proving difficult or am I being too careful. Tap is trying to move when applying torque anticlockwise but I am holding the tap to counter act the twist. Also tried a socket but provinh stubborn, any ideas?
 

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If you can get a good fit with a ring spanner, that would be better than an adjustable here, (a lot of ring spanners are 12 sided and only really grip on the corners, so not always very good on brass, but some grip the sides and will work well). Sockets can be good, but sometimes a bit clunky and not always ideal.
I also like to lever between the spout and the spanner (soft bit of wood as a lever), or pull them together.
By the way, that's not technically a gland nut, but it's the one you need to undo, so what you call it doesn't really matter.
 
Tried the ring spanner, better fit as suggested, but still no joy tried with more force but can feel tap trying to turn in my other hand which is trying to restrain it.
Paying £35 for a one time use for a tap splitter seems a waste really.
 
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Set the spanner close up to the spout so it becomes like handles on a pair of scissors when they close (hope that makes sense). Try and start close together so you bridge both with both palms and fingers.
 
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I think I know what you mean in affect mimicking the tap splitter but using hands, but this stil will introduce independent forces which will work against each other rather than together. Will the tap splitter tool work on this type of tap, can't find many examples of it on a modern tap
 
Yes, mimick the splitter that is what you want, the two to come together. If you had a third hand then a wack on the spanner with a hammer at the same time might help to shock it loose.
 
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The tap was fitted in 2002, and has only just started to leak. I8 years of solid state but how this affects the sink and tap spout is difficult to predict given the forces required to undue it, might have to bite the bullet and try the tap splitter.
 

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