How to seal a female coupler?

Joined
19 Mar 2016
Messages
58
Reaction score
1
Country
United Kingdom
Apologies for what's probably a very basic question, but I've just bought a female straight coupler, which has a normal compression fitting on one side, and the other side screws onto a thread.

The normal part is fine, compresses an olive. But the 'female' side doesn't have an olive, it just screws onto a half inch thread. What makes the water tight seal here? There's no olive or rubber washer, just two threads.

Many thanks.
 

Attachments

  • 20180425_192614.jpg
    20180425_192614.jpg
    163.9 KB · Views: 456
Sponsored Links
Apologies for what's probably a very basic question, but I've just bought a female straight coupler, which has a normal compression fitting on one side, and the other side screws onto a thread.

The normal part is fine, compresses an olive. But the 'female' side doesn't have an olive, it just screws onto a half inch thread. What makes the water tight seal here? There's no olive or rubber washer, just two threads.

Many thanks.

What are you doing with it? Nothing complicated I hope :)
 
Sponsored Links
Fiber or rubber washer in the base if it's a straight thread, if male is tapered ptfe/paste.
 
Wind PTFE tape on CLOCKWISE like in this video. Only thing I would do different is use a few more turns than he does in vid. If you turn the tape on anticlockwise, it will wind out of the joint as you do it up.

 
Thanks for all the replies folks. What I'm using for reference (pictured above in first post) is a readily avaliable 'female coupler' part from screwfix, nothing special. It just threw me a bit when there was no rubber washer or olive to 'make the seal'. Is it worth me seating a rubber washer in there like bigdrew says as well as PTFE thread? Or will that reduce the amount of thread engagement too much?

It's a straight coupler, so not lesbian! (wheeeeey)

The part is for fitting a replacement electric shower, I've got a threaded elbow sticking out the wall which my old shower fitted nicely onto but not my new one. I'm using this coupler for a mini extension of that elbow and it's a perfect fit.

I should have checked this before really, but can anyone confirm that I will be ok mixing my pipes? All the house uses copper, except for some reason my electric shower which is plastic piping which splices into a copper cold mains feed. Am I ok to use this coupler with that mix of materials? The water into my shower will be going copper plastic and then copper again. Something I didn't think of to ask.

Cheers everyone.
 
What you use depends on what it's being screwed onto. If it's a parallel length of screwed brass, such as shower manufacturers supply then you should use a back nut and a fibre washer, with the seal being formed between the machined outer face and the back nut (with the fibre washer trapped between). You should not screw tapered male fittings into parallel female ones : it might work but it's a botch.
 
As you wish, but the majority of the load is taken by a single thread. The difference between the world of engineering and plumbing
 
You’ve gotta do what you’ve gotta do!
Fitting in OP’s pic looks like a female iron... iron = poof, female iron = lesbian.
 
What you use depends on what it's being screwed onto. If it's a parallel length of screwed brass, such as shower manufacturers supply then you should use a back nut and a fibre washer, with the seal being formed between the machined outer face and the back nut (with the fibre washer trapped between). You should not screw tapered male fittings into parallel female ones : it might work but it's a botch.

No its not.

As you wish, but the majority of the load is taken by a single thread. The difference between the world of engineering and plumbing

If one uses parallel to parallel, one would need a washer / gasket, would one not?.
For example, we use to use a lot of "long screws", which obviously have to be parralel. One had to use a lock nut and hemp to create a seal.

If fitting a continental oven, they are typically supplied with a P/P connector set.
And a washer.

We generally do not use washers, apart from the above examples.

I take it, Jackrae, you are an "engineer", not a plumber.
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top