Old Plumbing

Plumbing Forums

Help Support Plumbing Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Mario3558

Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2025
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Location
Cleveland, OH
Last week I recently replaced all the galvanized water lines in this house that was built in 1912. Came across this old faucet & sink. Ran into a problem when I went to hook back up to it with new faucet supply lines. Obviously I recommended a new faucet & vanity. I couldn't thread back onto the threads on this faucet. I believe only could accept coarse threads? Is this typically a issue with plumbing this old? 1000004444.jpg1000004446.jpg1000004499.jpg1000004501.jpg
 
Last edited:
That faucet connection looks like a regular flexible faucet size
I thought so as well. Until I went to thread one on. A 83 year old man lived in this home. Had sentimental value to this faucet. Would not replace. He had a bin of old nuts & he found a 5/8s x 3/8s adapter we threaded on that worked. It was a very old fitting. The size wasn't the issue. I believe it was a fine threads vs coarse threads issue....
 
I thought so as well. Until I went to thread one on. A 83 year old man lived in this home. Had sentimental value to this faucet. Would not replace. He had a bin of old nuts & he found a 5/8s x 3/8s adapter we threaded on that worked. It was a very old fitting. The size wasn't the issue. I believe it was a fine threads vs coarse threads issue....
I also
I thought so as well. Until I went to thread one on. A 83 year old man lived in this home. Had sentimental value to this faucet. Would not replace. He had a bin of old nuts & he found a 5/8s x 3/8s adapter we threaded on that worked. It was a very old fitting. The size wasn't the issue. I believe it was a fine threads vs coarse threads issue....

That faucet connection looks like a regular flexible faucet size
I also tried this quick fix:
Tried a 1/2" female pro press adapter. Looked like it would work & it leaked.1000004504.jpg
 
OMG. Walk away from this if you are dealing with a crusty old man who won’t listen to reason. “Sentimental value” to ancient plumbing parts that are past their useful life? Only the Brits still value (for sentimental reasons) non-mixing faucets in a bathroom.

If one HAD to replace that nasty sink there are plenty of places around the country that have either salvage (in better condition) or NOS. I’ve seen them.
 
Back
Top