🔨 Unleash Your Inner Plumber with Precision!
The Jones Stephens J44300 J44-300 3" PVC Socket Saver is an essential tool for any plumbing professional or DIY enthusiast. Designed to effortlessly remove plastic pipes from fittings, this tool features a compact design with dimensions of 5" x 8" x 11". Its durable construction ensures longevity, while its precision cutting capability allows for clean cuts below the slab, making it a must-have for efficient plumbing tasks.
R**R
Worth The Money!
It worked just as it should. It will probably be a tool that will last my lifetime because you won't use it everyday but worth it.
G**.
Works as intended
This tool saved me a lot of time and money when working on my abs sewer line, I'm very happy with it.
A**R
It works. Wish I had found these things years ago.
I had a very tight situation with moving a toilet over by a few inches in a house on a crawl space, and really didn't want to have to cut out and replace three additional fittings and a couple short lengths of pipe to make it work. This tool saved me a LOT of work and headache. It leaves a bit of a rough surface inside the remaining fitting, but I slathered plenty of PVC cement inside and it worked like a charm.
C**T
Too small
It fits into a male 3" which is kind of worthless. I need it to fit into a 3" female so I can shave the male piece out and put a new one in. Now I just have a tool that can clean a 3" male pipe.
E**3
A good option
My review is for the 3-inch socket saver. I imagine that, due to the nature of the product, the difficulty of getting the cut precise increases as you increase the size (ie: ½-inch being easiest and 4-inch being hardest). I bought this because the toilet closet flange broke to the point where it could not be fixed with metal rings or other types of easy fixes. When trying to remove the closet flange from the 3-inch drain pipe via hammer and chisel, I was unable to properly remove the flange from the pipe. I found that there was no sufficient length of 3-inch pipe to cement a new connector to. From the toilet, it went: Flange ( a connector) > 90° elbow ( a connector) > 45° elbow (a connector) > Wye (a connector). So without cutting out the Wye and re-coupling several pipes and connections (sawing up more floor, more headache, etc.), I looked into my options. I tried melting the 90° elbow out of one of the connections with a heat gun. That worked, but it deformed/expanded the 3-inch pipe to the point where I couldn't get a reliable connection. That's when I found this and it answered the big question: how do I inexpensively get a fresh connection to cement a new pipe/connector to?Well, I successfully drilled out the pipe that was cemented in the 45° elbow. However, it is very tough to keep this perfectly straight the whole way through and when you aren't straight, you get minor ridges in the connector which may prevent a secure bond. One wish for this product would be a deeper guide. The guide is basically two welded washers. If it was deeper, it would be much less prone to wobbling. I wasn't confident that, with the cut ridges, I would have a reliable connection, so I want to both big box hardware stores to see what I could do to give me piece of mind. The Fernco rubber couplings seemed like the right choice, but they were only pipe-to-pipe connections in store and I needed connector to connector. It turns out that Fernco makes them, but they aren't readily available locally. I got one online, cemented my PVC connections and tightened the Fernco. Now I have confidence that if the pipe weld fails, the Fernco will back it up.The GOOD:• This can be a headache saver for someone that doesn't want to rip up floor/walls/ceilings to replace PVC pipe. PVC is cheap but getting to it can be expensive.• The build quality is solid and is priced well.The BAD (or iffy):• Difficult to keep perfectly aligned through the entirety of the cut.My recommendation• Get this and get a Fernco 3 in. x 3 in. PVC Plastic Socket to Plastic Socket Flexible Coupling - Model # 1060-3 and you will have a reliable PVC connector to connector bond. Also, use a corded drill with some heft.
J**E
Tool
No complaints
D**N
Life saver!
This is for the 3" cutter. In to my 3rd and final bath remodel in this 1970s house. Each of the first two needed to have the sub floor around the toilet replaced as it had become spongy over the years. Simple enough, and I went a step further each time. I installed tile, which results in a 1/2" or so build up from the linoleum-directly-over-the-sub-floor crap that was there. I'd cut back the 3" ABS pipe and install new pipe and fittings with a new stainless steel toilet flange. Worked perfect and put the flange at the proper grade, as in above the tile, not below grade with the tile built up around it. This last one had a surprise for me. Since I "knew" what to expect, I had already cut the old toilet flange off before cutting the sub floor open. Oooops. This one had a Y fitting for the nearby shower drain taking up what should have been straight pipe giving me enough room to cut back and fit replacements as before. No room to cut back. Screwed. Worse case? I would have to rip out more sub floor, walls, some of an adjacent bath already remodeled and main drain line from the second floor to the basement. Looked online and found some tips to try and bust the pieces apart with a sharp chisel. Nope. Don't even bother. Saw this 3" socket saver and decided to give a try. Glad I did. You definitely need a good 1/2" drill. Mine is 9.5A and worked well. Bored right through the old pipe leaving a snug fit in the socket for a new piece of 3" ABS. Perfect cut? No. Little rough, but cleaned it up with some 100 grit. Slobbed a bit of extra glue in the socket and on the pipe. Sold joint that will never be a problem. In fact, I don't think I'd hesitate to cut this same fitting again if the need ever presented. Easy to do and saved me a ton of money and extra work. Recommended.
H**O
Excelente más que buena
Fácil y muy útil herramienta para trabajar en tubería PVC ya que no lastima la pieza y supera la rapidez para resolver problemas de tubería rota.
B**E
Slightly too big
You might want to check the cut on a test pipe before doing the real job. I found it to be a little too big (Australian sewerage pipes) so I had to grind 2mm off the cutting blade otherwise it would not have left enough material on the female joiner to provide the new joint with any real strength. It didn't take long to get it to the right size and then it worked brilliantly!!!
N**O
unique solution.
effective
D**S
Exactly what I need it for
Incredible how rare these tools are, I've been to any store appropriate for plumbing (any and all suppliers) and until very recently I've only seen one for 1.5" pipe and it was like $150, I certainly won't use it often enough to need to spend that, but a 3" in commercial it's already cheaper than the coupling I'm reusing.For some reason it's also very hard to get on amazon, I wanted other sizes but they won't ship to my location (in a major city!), anyway the couple of times I've used this it was perfect
J**N
Toilet repair
This got me out of a pickle when my toilet flange was busted. Bored out and glued a new one in
A**R
For old sch40, not the new sdr35
In Canada, there seems to be a movement away from sch40 to sdr35 pvc pipe. This won’t work with sdr35, which is now more widely used. I’m sure it works fine for sch40. Someone should make one for sdr35 pipe
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