If you need to you can use PTFE tape.
Resuming a very old thread, but hopefully someone is still interested...
I was about to upgrade few isolation valves, replacing with full bore valves when I made the awkward discovery that the plastic pipe inserts have exactly the same diameter of the existing valves.
So my question is: what is the point of using full bore valves in a plastic pushfit installation that anyway has plenty of inserts?
The other question is: on a 22mm/15mm installation with good pressure and combi boiler, am I going to see a reduced flow rate due the partial bore of valves and inserts?
Thanks
I agree - I came to the same conclusion.Sounds pointless to fit full bore valves if your inserts are already restricting the flow?.
Ah, I was tempted by their no-name stop ends at the weekend but the reviews put me right off. I stick with Hep2O and it's been good to me..apart from the pricetag.The no-name products used at my house (sold by Toolstation) have inserts without o-rings with an inner diameter equal to the non-full bore valves from the same series. I wanted to upgrade to full bore valves from another brand, but I think it is pointless, as anyway the bottlenecks are the inserts.
Thanks for the tip about elbows - I never appreciated the extent of the diameter reduction.
That's like saying the speedlimits been changed to 50mph an hour I may aswell just do 40mph everywhere (which some people admittedly do!). On branded kit I've seen the inserts restrict diameter about 10% a normal isolation valve would restrict a FURTHER 10% (minimum).Sounds pointless to fit full bore valves if your inserts are already restricting the flow?.
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