I’m pretty new to this. I was considering replacing it with something else because it leaks slightly from the valve if it gets moved around at all, but I don’t know what this connection is to start with. It goes to a dishwasher.

  • mortrek@lemmy.mlOP
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    8 months ago

    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@sub.wetshaving.social
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      8 months ago

      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@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      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.