Can anyone explain this please…..
I’ve cleaned up 2 x 15mm pipes, deburred and also the inside of a 15mm Yorkshire too
The cuts are clean
I push the Yorkshire on to the one pipe until I hear it click and can’t push it any further and hold it tight
Now I push the other pipe into the other end of the Yorkshire the same way until it won’t go any further, making sure the coupler doesn’t move
Now for the magic trick….i would expect the coupler to not be able to move, as both pipes were pushed in as far as they could go, right ?
Wrong
Somehow it can move a couple or 3mm towards the 2nd pipe that was inserted
Now I know it’s Sunday and I’ve had a pint but how is this so, I thought the pipe ends in the coupler virtually touched ?
Am I being thick ??
Surely if there is a gap within the coupler and the pipes don’t meet, surely that’s a trap to prevent smooth flow and a trap for sediment/rubbish to stick to ?
Any thoughts on this please ?
Give it a try if you have some 15mm and a Yorkshire knocking around
I’ve cleaned up 2 x 15mm pipes, deburred and also the inside of a 15mm Yorkshire too
The cuts are clean
I push the Yorkshire on to the one pipe until I hear it click and can’t push it any further and hold it tight
Now I push the other pipe into the other end of the Yorkshire the same way until it won’t go any further, making sure the coupler doesn’t move
Now for the magic trick….i would expect the coupler to not be able to move, as both pipes were pushed in as far as they could go, right ?
Wrong
Somehow it can move a couple or 3mm towards the 2nd pipe that was inserted
Now I know it’s Sunday and I’ve had a pint but how is this so, I thought the pipe ends in the coupler virtually touched ?
Am I being thick ??
Surely if there is a gap within the coupler and the pipes don’t meet, surely that’s a trap to prevent smooth flow and a trap for sediment/rubbish to stick to ?
Any thoughts on this please ?
Give it a try if you have some 15mm and a Yorkshire knocking around
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