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Matt0029

Gas Engineer
Oct 6, 2017
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Heating Engineer (Has GSR)
Have noticed my success rate with compression fittings fall over the last year or so. Am getting a few that weep. When I back to nut off to have a look the olive isn't over tighthed and I always clean the pipe first. Wondering if anyone else has noticed this whether it's just me or the quality of fittings has decreased. Have recently started using V2 plus on the olive. This seems to give a perfect joint all the time. But obviously adds time in as have to back the nut off after tightening to apply.
 
1. Forefinger with a little V2 wiped around the sharp edge of the fitting to leave a ring of V2.
2. Little finger with a little V2 wiped around the inside edge of the narrow end of the compression nut to give another small ring.
3. Do up fitting.
4. Wipe fingers.

I know the advice is "new fittings don't need anything" and on the whole I agree. However the economic and reputational cost of having to go back to fix a weep to my mind makes using V2 as a pre-emptive measure a winner. If all fittings were Conex or Pegler it would be a different story.
 
Compound the pipe first with the nut and olive on then give the olive a smear then tighten up but it’s down to crap fittings and tube these days you would be surprised how much the tube od varies
Thanks have definitely noticed having more of a problem with them recently.
 
Had a few leak, even after swapping olives out, even had one carry on after ptfe, was a bad day then, ready to jack the job in (but that’s a different story), so could have been as Shaun says, diameter of tube.
 
Dab of V2 on shoulder of olive where it meets the nut. Gets smeared round as you tighten.
Do you paste the olive before you tighten on to the pipe? I occasionally PTFE d the olive but was time consuming backing it off after tightening to wrap around. Thanks
 
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Do you paste the olive before you tighten on to the pipe? I occasionally PTFE d the olive but was time consuming backing it off after tightening to wrap around. Thanks
Yes. And if I PTFE then I do it before any tightening. Not sure why you would remove to tape - time consuming as you say and if anything likely to introduce leaks.
 
Yes. And if I PTFE then I do it before any tightening. Not sure why you would remove to tape - time consuming as you say and if anything likely to introduce leaks.

I used to do it as an apprentice (How i was shown), to prevent the olive moving up and down.
 
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I used to do it as an apprentice (Honeywell i was shown), to prevent the olive moving up and down.
I put on the nut then olive then fitting. And wrap the olive in situ. Once the olive is taped it won't go anywhere.
Out of interest I was looking for pictures of compression joints and tape and found this on diydoctor.com
SMFH!
 

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I'm a rank total amateur but use a thin layer of Fernox LSX on the pipe, push on the olive then another thin layer. Also now when I remember a dab of grease on the threads to get a better feel for the tightening of the nut as I've l
poor hand strength. Never had one leak but that's statistics.

Cheers,

Roy
 
Quality is dropping off for every day fittings unless you use conex , kuterlite and the like
So the Kuterlite is top quality Pegler and you can get them from Screwfix. See Screwfix also stock Pegler's Endex end feed fittings for soldering. For those with an Xpress tool would you also do Pegler VSH?

Cheers,
Roy
 
When fitting new compression fittings I never use PTFE or paste but after pushing the pipe fully home I then pull it back a few mm before tightning up.
 
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I just feel that the olive can do its job properly without the pipe end being stopped and restrained from moving inwards with less sealing force on the olive end.
 

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