Leaking washing machine hose

Joined
2 Jan 2009
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Location
Hampshire
Country
United Kingdom
Hi

We had our kitchen done last year and fitted new hot and cold connecting hoses to the back of our washing machine

whilst the hot hose has been fine the cold hose, no matter how hard we tighten it after a while starts to drip from where it connects onto the main feed and not the washing machine end

we have replaced the hose twice and though it initially resolve the problem after 4-6 weeks it starts again

we do have an outside boiler which is on a direct feed, and have no loft tank

if anyone has any ideas on how i can stop it driping i'd be very grateful
 
Sponsored Links
the cold hose connects onto the back of the washing machine - no leak here, and then connects onto the main copper pipe feed

the leak is coming from this end
 
Sponsored Links
the hose has a plastic fitting with a rubber washer inside, the fitting screws onto a connector which is itself screwed onto the 15mm copper pipe feed

the leak is coming from where the plastic pipe screws onto the connector
 
Paul,

Take the hose off and check there is no damage around the edge of the connecter which mught be in turn damagae the rubber washer.

Also over-tightening the nut can incease your problem by distorting the rubber washer.

Usuall hand tight plus a nip up is enough. If it still drips nip up a bit more.

You could also (but mabe frowned upon by some) apply some ptfe tape to the threads of the connector.

Rico
 
The seal is achieved with a rubber washer between two flat surfaces so PTFE tape will only make it more difficult to tighten the nut and make a leak more likely.

Mike
 
You could also (but mabe frowned upon by some) apply some ptfe tape to the threads of the connector.

Not at all, Sir PTFE is surely the answer or jet blue. P.T.F.E. ( plumbers tape fixes everything). ;)
 

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