Opening radiator steam traps - question for Gordon Schweizer or anyone else
I have seen Gordon's excellent Youtube videos on rebuilding radiator steam traps. I have completed many of mine but now I'm getting to the ones with stubborn caps.
To get the cap off, in one video he recommends using a breaker bar with a backing wrench on the trap body, and in another he recommends using an impact driver.
The first is fine if you have two people, which is usually not the case.
Should I worry about breaking the trap body or the piping if I use an impact driver or a breaker bar without a backing wrench?
(FWIW my radiator traps are nearly all Hoffman 17C "old style")
Comments
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@PEvans said: "Should I worry about breaking the trap body or the piping if I use an impact driver or a breaker bar without a backing wrench?"
YES!!! Ask me how I know that……………….
All Steamed Up, Inc.
Towson, MD, USA
Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
Oil & Gas Burner Service
Consulting1 -
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Thanks, everyone.
@EBEBRATT-Ed I'm worried about the 1-3/8 socket slipping off the nut on the cap. I feel like I need one hand to hold it down on the nut.
No one recommending an impact driver?
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Scissor bite with opposing wrenches. Wear some deerskin work gloves so you dont slip and need stitches. Mad Dog
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Hi, I've used the opposing wrenches trick, but try putting the ends of the wrenches very near each other, then use a third tool as a lever or prybar between the wrenches. This gives you good mechanical advantage. Also use a socket, ground down as @mattmia2 suggests, but use a six point variety. You'll win 🥳
Yours, Larry
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Great stuff here. Thanks everyone.
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I had a Hoffman 17C trap whose cover would not come off. With some heat and an adjustable wrench, I got the cap off, but in doing so, I bent the trap body or the cap slightly out of round. So I “second that emotion” of using a six point socket.
You’ll get more force, spread more evenly around on the cap if you do so. You wouldn’t hand tighten a pipe into a fitting using your fingers (call that “12 point”), you’d wrap your whole hand around it and tighten it using your palm (“6-point”), wouldn’t you?In regard to impact wrenches, I talked a company into selling me an eight-point special order socket to get the squarehead plug out of my Weil-McLain boiler. I sweet-talked them into selling me just one, not 20!
It took me about two minutes to get that socket off, in place since 1994, and I didn’t have to take the boiler jacket off to do so.
No matter what you do, as the pros have advised previously, you need a wrench on the exit piping to counteract the torque that you’re putting on the trap cover head, imho ….
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To clarify, I had 400-500-ish pounds of boiler acting as the “counter-wrench” when I used that impact socket! ….
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I do have a 3/4 inch drive six-point socket of the correct size and a 3/4 drive breaker bar.
@WilliamGwiazdowski I think you had it easy.
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The telecom industry uses 4 point sockets. I bought one a few months back, ½ drive ¾ square IIRC, got it on eBay.
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When you put the caps back on a little Never Seize won't hurt. Just use a little bit
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