I’ve got an older supply valve where the rubber seal has failed and the threading on the valve stem is nearly gone. Big box replacement stems don’t fit.
I’m happy to replace it, but I’m not sure how it’s bonded to the pipe.
Here are pictures of the old valve and a replacement valve.
The pipe is chromed copper (I think) and is 11/16 but necks down to 5/8 which matches the 3/8 replacement valve’s ID (because plumbing sizes are silly). It disappears into a tight tile hole in the wall with no other exposed joints. I was thinking of cutting it off and using a shark bite, but it wont fit that sized pipe that I can find. I’m fine sweating it off and replacing too.
No brand markings are visible and none of the plumbing stores nearby had seals of right dimensions. (3/8 ID 5/8 OD 1/8 thick) at any rate, the stem’s brass treads have corroded and mostly crumbled off. There’s just enough to keep the valve closed with the OK seal at the tip of the stem, so luckily we have water, but no flushing upstairs.
I’d be happy just replacing the stem if I could find one, the body of the valve and gland nut all look great and the internet threads are fine too. I just haven’t been able to identify it.
UPDATE: No luck with the torch, heated it up nearly glowing and no budge. I'm really curious how it's bonded or pressed in there at this point. Can't wait to cut it in half when it's out.
I've got a combination of compression fittings/caps that close off the old valve so we can flush the toilet for now. There's a slow drip (since it's not compressing anything, but it's better than it was with the crusty valve stem seal. I'm a little tempted to get some pipe dope on there and fix it "forever".
Diligent_Nature t1_j90z4do wrote
That is a soldered connection. The O.D. of 1/2" copper pipe is 5/8".