I'd swap them for the screw type ones, like you have on the other pipes. They are not really designed to be reused, but a pair of Olde Worlde pinchers will do them up. Might get away with using a pair of side cutters.More ingenious designed clips.
This time on a diesel heater pump
What are they called. Opened easily
Now I cannot close them.
I can't stop them spinning around the pipe as I try to clip them shut. What's the trick?
How do you do them up?
Pincers make closing easyMore ingenious designed clips.
This time on a diesel heater pump
What are they called. Opened easily
Now I cannot close them.
I can't stop them spinning around the pipe as I try to clip them shut. What's the trick?
How do you do them up?
You'd never get a tool like that into the available space. Bloody stupid idea.Pincers make closing easy
As you found, they're easy to remove and don't have the problems of screw hoseclips.
You'd never get a tool like that into the available space. Bloody stupid idea.
Yep, that is what I used.
The smallest size that a conventional worm drive hose clip will screw down to is 9mm. Do not be tempted by the fact that Jubilee now coin the band all the way around into thinking that you can just do it up further - the housing design only supports a min of 9mm before you start getting gaps under the band at the edges of the housings and then leak paths. Better, I think, to buy a brand that only coins the band in the part of the band that the clip can actually be tightened to.Yes, so would I. Much better than the "jubilee" clip on small diameters, and easy to find in the days of Ebay etc.