Outside Water Spigot - Fail

   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #21  
I like crash325's suggestion for your case.

I replaced one on our daughter's condo. It was connected to CPVC inside. A relatively easy job.

One went out on the front of our house. Had our plumber replace it. Didn't take him long, but he could easily get to the copper pipe inside. I didn't watch what all he had to do.

I replaced the stem on 2 out of the 3 ones we had. Yours doesn't look like it allows that. The rubber seal inside where it shuts off the flow had sprung a leak on both of these.

Ralph
 
   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail
  • Thread Starter
#23  
Why not try reseating the valve using an inexpensive valve reseating tool

It's not the seal its internal thread is stripped. I can tighten until almost sealed then it pops back one thread and you have to start all over again. It's currently tightened to that point just before it slips a thread.

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   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #24  
I had to have 2 freeze proof faucets replaced that froze because I forgot to unhook the hoses. The plumber had to cut a hole in the wall to sweat on a new faucet. He brought and installed a plastic cover over the hole. It doesn't look bad and if ever I have to repair/replace those faucets again, just remove the cover, and replace the faucets. One was in my garage and one behind my wash room sink so both kind of hidden.
 
   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail
  • Thread Starter
#25  
I had to have 2 freeze proof faucets replaced that froze because I forgot to unhook the hoses. The plumber had to cut a hole in the wall to sweat on a new faucet. He brought and installed a plastic cover over the hole. It doesn't look bad and if ever I have to repair/replace those faucets again, just remove the cover, and replace the faucets. One was in my garage and one behind my wash room sink so both kind of hidden.

I like that idea!

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   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #26  
Don't put too much weight on not cutting sheetrock, it is easy to repair and a good working faucet is more important.
 
   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #27  
My money says its soldered to the copper inside, and nothing will unscrew.

Either gain access inside to replace, or use a shutoff like suggested. I see in the pics you already have a double shutoff adapter on there. Does that not work or is it leaking elsewhere?
.
:thumbsup:
 
   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #28  
That's not the original faucet handle. Remove it and you will see a hex headed fitting that MAY easily be unscrewed from the faucet body using a pipe wrench and a Stilson wrnch. At the end of the long valve body is a faucet washer that you can find in any old school hardware store. Don't look in Hobby Lobby, Michaels or Bed, Bath and Beyond. Those are plastic ones used to sip wine, dispense expresso and dribble soy milk into green tea.
 
   / Outside Water Spigot - Fail #29  
Even if the faucet is threaded on, the replacement would have to be exactly the same length to work. You also wouldn't have any way of holding the copper adapter to keep it from spinning. If that faucet has been there for almost 40 years those threads are going to be stuck, if you turn the faucet with a wrench you're going to snap the copper off before the threaded connection gives. With a buried pipe like this the last thing you want is a slow leak where you stressed an old connection.

Make a hole in the drywall.

If possible, make the hole away from the corner, out in the middle of a wall or ceiling. It's easier to fix if it's all flat, and you only want to repaint one surface. Make the hole big enough to get in and work, a 16" hole is no more work to fix than a 4" hole. Ideally you want to assemble the faucet and pipe first, and then slide it all in and join it in the middle of your hole. That way you're only making one connection inside the wall and you're making it where you have good access. When sweating copper if you can't go all the way around it's easy to make a poor joint. Plus it's nice to be able to work in a spot where you're not worried about burning the house down.

I would get the faucet with the threaded end and a threaded-to-sweat copper adapter. I would sweat about a foot long piece of copper pipe into the adapter, and then attach the adapter onto the faucet. That way you don't have to put the torch to the faucet. I know they're supposed to be able to take it, but it's better not to. You don't want to be doing this again before another 40 years. If it's not a straight run assemble all the copper and then screw the faucet on last.
 

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