Shower cartridge puller
20180354111 ยท 2018-12-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
B25B7/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B25B7/123
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P19/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B25B27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B25B27/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23P19/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system for removal of Moen cartridges or cores and sleeves from plumbing valve bodies is facilitated with a tool having concave, cylindrical billed jaws on a vise-grip pair of pliers and a specially built extraction tool on the screw end of the vise-grip. The outer shape of the billed jaws matches the outer diameter of the cartridge's core. The tool's bills lock on the inner core of the cartridge. Ideally the inner core and outer sleeve will both be extracted with the tool's bills. When conditions are not ideal due to hardened or broken o-rings and corrosion, rotating the tool and cartridge are required to free them from the valve body. The Pasco stem and cartridge puller attached to the screw end of the vise-grips is used to extract the outer sleeve of the cartridge after the inner core has been removed.
Claims
1. A system for pulling shower and faucet valve cartridge cores and sleeves from plumbing housings, said system consisting of a single tool which is a modified vise-grip pliers with billed ends at the mouth: the billed ends are rendered concave by drilling with a 7/16 inch drill and thereby producing the desired said concave bills. The screw end of the vise-grip pliers are modified by threading a Pasco stem and cartridge puller onto the screw. The Pasco stem and cartridge puller comes with a nipple at the far end which engages the hole in the sleeves of plumbing fixtures and thereby removes the sleeve. The said billed ends are designed to engage the core of the valve cartridge and pull it out by compressing the pliers in a standard fashion. The said Pasco stem and cartridge puller which is threaded to the screw end of the pliers by means of a tap and die set known as a quarter 20 pulls out the sleeve by engaging the plumbing fixture at the hole which is manufactured in the sleeve. The said Pasco stem puller, threaded to the screw of the vise-grip pliers, is used to retrieve the sleeve of the valve set by means of the nipple which fits into the hole manufactured into the sleeve. The vise-grip pliers are well suited to twisting back and forth in order to remove both the core and the sleeve.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010]
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The present invention is a tool which is capable of removing and replacing a shower mixing valve known as a cartridge, especially those recognized by the generic name of Moen. This can be done easily and quickly by a worker of average skill and dexterity. It does not require a professional plumber, which is the chief drawback of most prior inventions dealing with removal and replacement of shower and faucet cartridges. My invention provides a more sure control to replace both the core and the sleeve, without the use of a wrench, tap or potentially awkward additional tool. My invention is complete in one unit, everything is contained in a single tool, without the drawbacks and complexity of other conventionally available tools and methods. The one-handed tool I have invented consists of a vise-grip type pliers, made for instance by Milwaukee Manufacturing. The pliers come with flat plates as bills on the mouth of the pliers. I drilled at the billed end of the pliers, in between the adjoining plates with a 7/16 drill to make the circular, concave bills that can grasp the core of the plumbing fixture known as the cartridge. To the tension adjustment/screw end of the vise-grip pliers, I threaded the shaft of an Ace stem and cartridge puller by Pasco, so it becomes one piece with the pliers. This facilitates the tension adjustment of the pliers and utilizes the nipple feature on the opposite side of the Pasco stem and cartridge puller to grasp the outer sleeve of the plumbing cartridge. When retrieving the core from the cartridge, the first thing that my invention does is to grasp the protruding core of the cartridge with the concave feature of the bills of the vise-grip pliers. The vise-grip pliers are then turned from side to side while pulling, which will remove both the core and the sleeve of the cartridge out of the valve body under favorable conditions. Often, however, due to corrosion and broken o-rings, the sleeve portion of the cartridge may remain lodged in the valve body, at which time the opposite screw end of my invention is used. The threaded Pasco stem puller with the nipple attached to the screw end of the pliers must be employed to remove the recalcitrant sleeve. That is, the cartridge sleeve pulling feature at the other end of the threaded tension adjustment shaft has a nipple at the end which fits into a hole manufactured in the sleeve. Then the sleeve can be removed by a person of average skill and dexterity. Replacement of a new cartridge assembly is easily facilitated with positive control of the cartridge securely held by the concave bill section of the pliers which is then pushed into position within the plumbing housing.
Preferred Embodiment of the Invention
[0012]