About This Project
Q: Your article on fixing drippy faucets (July/Aug. ‘04) was great, but you missed one problem. We can’t loosen the Allen screw to remove the handle from our rotary ball faucet. Should we give up and buy a completely new faucet?
—Kathy Martell, via e-mail
If the Allen screw is stuck, or if you strip it so it won’t come out, remove the cap with the handle still in place. You can’t grab the flattened edges with the handle in place. Instead, cushion the plier jaws and grip the round edge below.
This is tricky,because you can’t grab the flat edge of the cap, the part that’s shaped for the pliers. Make sure to cushion the jaws well when you grip the smooth, rounded body of the cap.Use rubber tape, because you can’t squeeze the cap too hard. Turn the cap counterclockwise to unscrew it. The assembly you remove will contain the handle, cap, cam,packing and ball.
The next challenge is to break the ball from its stem. (The Allen screw clamps onto the stem.) Try grabbing it with the pliers and twisting. The goal is to separate the parts so that you can salvage and reuse the cap. You’ll still have to buy a new handle and a repair kit that includes a new ball.
If this doesn’t work, the only solution is to replace the entire faucet.This is a tough fix. Good luck!




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