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xmunk , to Work Reform in Everyday thoughts

Don't worry! We couldn't kill all life on earth if we tried! We'll just kill all the humans and large animals... and we'll get to mulligan that in a few million years anyways.

GlitterInfection , to aww in soft squishes provide cute dreams

Awwww so sweet!

funkajunk , to Home Improvement in What kind of valve is this exactly? Never seen that exact connection type
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

It’s an angle valve for sure, but it looks ancient. Nowadays the valve would be inserted into what looks like pex piping there on the right, and you crimp a ring over the piping to get a nice tight compression fit.

mortrek OP ,

The house was built 7 years ago, so maybe the plumbers just threw on whatever they had in their van. Do you know what the crimped method/area is called on this thing? Is there a specific term for it?

funkajunk ,
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

They’re usually just called “crimp rings” or “cinch clamps”, the former being the more popular term in my experience. They do require a specific crimping tool, but if you go to your local home improvement store they usually sell a kit that includes the tool with rings, and possibly even a PEX cutter.

walden , to Home Improvement in What kind of valve is this exactly? Never seen that exact connection type

Sorry, could you provide a little more information? You say it leaks from the “valve”, but there are 3 different places it could be leaking from, and all are part of the valve – the valve being the whole device from pipe to pipe.

If you’re thinking of replacing the whole thing, I’d focus more on the type of pipe, which looks like Pex coming from the house, and probably some sort of standard dishwasher feed line on the other side.

Ideally you could buy a replacement valve before starting the project, but you might have to remove this valve and take it to the hardware store to make sure you get the correct thing.

I’ve never worked with Pex, but I believe you can either crimp it with a special tool or use the sharkbite system.

mortrek OP ,

Unfortunately is has stopped leaking for now. I say unfortunately, because I don’t know when it may start again. It seemed to start to leak when I pulled out the dishwasher, so movement/flexing/etc made it happen. I was unable to determine exactly where it leaked from, but it seemed to pool near the center of the entire valve, so it could have been near the crimped area or the knob area, or maybe even the connection going off to the dishwasher, and the water could have just run down to the lowest bit of the valve.

It’s 1/2" nominal PEX going to a quarter-turn shutoff, to a 3/8 braided dishwasher line. I just didn’t know what to call the weird crimped/connector part on the PEX, and thus how to properly remove it if necessary. All of the PEX crimps that I’ve found online have been very different looking.

walden ,

I agree it’s an odd looking crimp, maybe just an older style of what we have today. I’d guess that’s the least likely thing to leak.

Best case scenario the dishwasher line just needs to be tightened. Worst case you can replace the whole thing with a sharkbite type valve, but you’ll probably need to cut back the previously crimped section of PEX (note: I really have no clue about that).

madcaesar ,

Micro leaks can plug themselves with time as calcium builds up.

The easiest fix to that is just a sharkbite valve since its accessible and visible. Probably 15 min job.

Or you could go with the pex clamp route but that requires a special tool.

infinitevalence , to Home Improvement in What kind of valve is this exactly? Never seen that exact connection type
@infinitevalence@discuss.online avatar

www.homedepot.com/p/…/310003446

Yours has a different crimp style, but its a 1/4 turn shutoff valve with PEX crimp. Looks like standard builder quality.

mortrek OP ,

Oh, that’s a PEX crimp? Does it have a specific name? Most of the PEX crimps that I’ve found have looked very different.

ikidd ,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

The crimp style shouldn’t matter. Use what you can get that fits 1/2" pex.

Kethal , to Home Improvement in What kind of valve is this exactly? Never seen that exact connection type

I’m guessing it’s a right angle quarter turn ball valve. It’s crimped on one side and looks like a compression fitting on the other. Maybe it’s a gate valve, which in my experience are far more prone to leaks, but the notches in the handle make me think ball valve.

Which part leaks?

Truffle , to Photography in I love aquatic plants

Beautiful shot! I love the darker background.

Maeve , to Photography in I love aquatic plants

Captivating

teagrrl OP ,
@teagrrl@lemmy.ml avatar

Thank you for the kind comment.

Maeve ,

Yes'm

Jake_Farm , to Photography in Chalet on the edge of winter woods, Gosau, Gmunden, Austria.
@Jake_Farm@sopuli.xyz avatar

I didn’t even know pine trees could get that tall!

TheLongPrice , to Photography in The Judgement

I feel judged

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

that cardinal is not impressed

TheLongPrice , to Photography in Nafplion, Greece

Love the red colors here

thatsTheCatch , to LinkedinLunatics in NSFL

It’s excellent satire

“I love posting satirical stories to LinkedIn (almost as a hobby now) because no one expects jokes on a ‘professional’ social network,” he said.

Today.com - Man posts about cooking chicken in a hotel’s coffee pot — and the internet exploded

smackjack ,

Now I’m curious. Would this actually work? Just how hot does that heating plate get?

hansl ,

It boils stuff so at least 212*F. You’d need a lot of time to cook it.

You could boil it I guess. Boiled chicken isn’t TOO bad.

IHaveTwoCows ,

The warmer plate does not boil things

hansl ,

Oh I thought it was like a kettle he was using.

smackjack ,

I could see a fancy outdoorsy type of coffee maker being able to boil water. Collect your water from the river, boil it, and make some coffee.

ech ,

Looks like it hits at least ~170^o^F, so you could slow cook tiny meals in it.

middleman35 ,

I mean, you can cook a chicken by slapping it…

Raiderkev ,

It reminded me of this vid my buddy posted in discord the other day. 🤢

twitter.com/betcheswildin/…/1711055716054683931?s…

captain_aggravated ,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Here’s the problem: a coffee pot gets hotter when there’s water going through it.

The same heating element that warms the bottom of the carafe also heats a small section of tubing meant to boil water. This, along with a simple check valve, forms a bubble pump, which is how the hot water gets up to the coffee grounds.

There’s a thermal switch that allows full power when that coil of water is below a certain temperature, and when it gets hotter than that, it switches to a lower power mode, because with no water to boil, all it needs to do is keep the carafe warm. I don’t have the numbers in front of me but I doubt it would get hot enough to properly cook chicken.

filcuk ,

Chicken soup it is

captain_aggravated ,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Actually I think that would work.

Bombyk0l ,

It does, there are multiple people on youtube that have effectively cooked soup in their coffee machines and used other appliances for food like the dishwasher for example.

manos_de_papel , to Photography in Chalet on the edge of winter woods, Gosau, Gmunden, Austria.

This is really nice, you should print it and hang it on the wall.

Redfox8 , to Photography in Chalet on the edge of winter woods, Gosau, Gmunden, Austria.

Makes me think of the house from A Wild Sheep Chase by Haruki Murakami.

TSG_Asmodeus , to Photography in Chalet on the edge of winter woods, Gosau, Gmunden, Austria.
@TSG_Asmodeus@lemmy.world avatar
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