I am an 80-year-old grandma. When my faucet became loose, my daughter said to look it up on UA-cam and I would find a video showing me exactly how to fix it. Your video came right up (with my exact faucet)and I fixed it in less than 5 minutes. You saved me a bundle. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Mine needed the slotted retaining ring to be tightened. If you remove the cartridge you will see a brass slotted ring that holds the brass piece in. It’s takes a special tool to tighten, but you can use small skinny screwdrivers to stick in the slots and spin the ring around to tighten
Thank you. This faucet came with our house, and I didn’t have a manual or model # to look up. Your fix with an Allen wrench worked like a charm. I’m so glad I found your video.
Thank you so much for the tutorial! The faucet handle was loose for 2 years. The maintenance guy from the apartment complex said these faucets are not adjustable. Now, I fixed it in 2 minutes. Tightened it a bit with Hex key (Allen wrench) 2.5 mm. (the position of the cap was facing the sink and I used my nails to remove the small cap)
Thank you so so much! This video is exactly what I needed! If only I had been able to discover the make/model of my faucet sooner, been living with a wicked loose handle for almost a year, lol.
Once the handle is off and you remove the trim cap, there is a brass keeper nut around the inside ring, further back than the black plastic nut. If you look carefully you will see keyway notches in the brass set nut. Insert a small screwdriver or thin tool and rotate the keeper right to tighten. That will fix the wobble without the need to insert the tie wrap.
This!! Thank you!!! Tightening the brass ring fixed it! Mine was tight underneath. The brass ring took about 1/8th of a turn. It's not the brass you see right away, it's inside the faucet a bit.
This is the correct answer for my issue. I used the same allen used to remove the handle and it fit perfectly. Ended up using a 2nd allen wrench, on opposite sides, for a easy turn.
@@maryc6091 The faucet was in our Cabin which has a heavy 8 ft formica cover sitting on the kitchen drawers sets. I was able to move the entire counter and look at the back of the faucet. Turns out that this was not necessary, once I figured out how it is done. But I had to see and figure it out this was the 1st time. However, in your case where you can't get the allen wrench into the back, it means that your faucet was installed after the counter was in place. I was afraid that I would have had to do what I am going to tell you is what either you or a professional expensive plumber will have to do. You have to go under the sink and remove the faucet so you can get to the back of the faucet and tighten it up. This will take an amateur a couple of hours, but a professional can do it easily under an hour. However, there is always a chance that someone with the right length allen wrench can do this without taking it all apart. I wish you well. And I do believe in prayer in little situations - probably so I will remember where to turn in big life issues.
@@rajeshdavidjohn I bought an Eklind set on Amazon ($4.50). Its perfect for me because they are short allens. I have a corner sink with a shelf directly behind so longer allens wont work in my situation.
Thank you so much, I was frustrated for a year or two of having my kitchen faucet handle detached because I couldn't figure out how to fix it. That little cap in the back is so well hidden! now my faucet works just fine and my wife and I are so happy.
Thanks sooo much! Fixed my mom's Moen faucet in ~10 minutes after watching your vid. I put a towel down in the sink to cover the hole (no losing the cover/cap!) and place my tools. After removing the cover/cap all I had to do was tighten the screw w/an Allen wrench... Thank you!
@@maryc6091I have a wall behind mine and the Allen wrench still fit through the hole and seated in the screw. I didn’t have to loosen the whole thing…thankfully! By the way…mine required a 3/32 allen wrench.
Thank you for your video. My faucet is a Moen and it took a 3/32 Allen wrench. As a note to others who may have the issue I had….I removed the handle and thought the set screw was missing. Moen sent us a new one, but it turned out that the set screw was not easily visible and when I tried to install the new one, it wouldn’t catch. I began to inspect it further and realized the original one was still there, and only needed about 1 and a half turns with the Allen wrench. I wish I would have realized sooner because it would have saved us the time we waited for the new set screw!😊
I owe you, my dude!!!! Thank you so much for this video. First time home- (er, condo) owner in my twenties with no idea how to repair ANYTHING 😂 This video taught me two things: how to fix the faucet handle -- which worked flawlessly -- and what an allen wrench is lol!
@@ruthb9117 I had to get the angle just right because the bolt was in an awkward spot-- so I had to carefully jiggle the tool until I felt it grab onto the head.
@@ruthb9117 I would next try to get a view of the bolt head like with a cell phone camera you can slide under with flash. It may take a few tries but then you'll know if the head is stripped or not.
For my faucet it's been loose dome was coming apart for a year. I had two sets of allen hex keys which were in metric none of them fit and tighten it. I bought a SAE Allen set today 3/32" is definitely a different size!!! It fitted on the first try. I hope it won't be loose ever again. Thanks for the video.
Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you! I have been trying to fix this for like 20 minutes and then you showed me what to do and I got the right Allen wrench thank you so much!!
For me, it was the assembly that was loose. I saw that you can remove the curved housing and underneath there, about a half inch back is a threaded ring with notches that you can tighten down. I had to use a relatively thin punch and small hammer to rotate it enough to stop the movement. It seems to be what tightens the handle to the vertical portion of the faucet. That's what worked for me. Thanks for the video that got me pointed in the right direction!!!
Tightening the large, outer, thin brass threaded ring, with the notches in it, is the correct way to tighten the loose assembly. Wouldn't it be nice if Moen provided a tool to properly tighten the ring?
That trick the did. The whole valve was jiggling. I tried a long pair of needle nose pliers but they were not long enough to engage both notches simultaneously. A long skinny flat head screwdriver worked well enough. This was also a good time to wash the hard water marks off the trim ring. Thanks guys.
What worked for me was a 3/32" key, and I had to push it firmly against a small centre button for it to go into the hex socket. Then I was easily able to tighten it up. Thank you!
Thank you for your help I have the SAME EXACT faucet and problem. I used your video for guidance! I found the PROBLEM!!! When you remove the plastic housing *silver around the black nut, around the sides of the black plastic nut there is a brass nut/ring with 2 slits in it. THAT is what is loose making the noise! I ended up using one of the allen wrenches, slide it into one of the slits and tap it down softly to tighten up the brass nut/ring, if you go the right way the noise will completely vanish. I think this backs out on its own after time from turning the water off and on.
This was exactly what I needed. I've had my Moen faucet for over five years, and since day one the handle would not stay fixed in any position much below full heat. The weight of the handle was enough to rotate it down to full cold. I was able to remove the handle once I knew that it was held on by a small set screw. In my case I needed to slightly tighten that 21mm nut. First, I had to break it loose (loosen it) and then I was able to slowly snug it up a few degrees at a time until the handle held position at any point.
Thank you for your very good video. I'm going to try to fix mine because my handle just falls down and hits the marble countertop. Any ideas on that? Thank you.
Thank you. I was afraid to find out how much disassembly would be required. I saw your video first and fixed the loose handle in about 5 seconds. No disassembly at all !!!
Any idea how to keep it tight? Mine comes loose about once a week and it's close to the backsplash so it's a real pain to tighten. I even bent the Allen key lightning it
@@brandiegschmidt I contacted the company, they sent me the inner part (valve) and it had a new set screw with thread lock on it, installed (11 months go now) and it's not come loose since then. It's got a lifetime warranty.
Got tired of our kitchen faucet flopping around so found this video after much difficult seeing into the hole due to poor eyes, I tried the 5/64 Allen NO GO! Went to a 3/32 Allen which worked like champ, tightened the handle right up! So I believe it's 3/32 Allen you probably need? Addendum: Reading farther down in the comments others have already found the 3/32 is the correct size Allen to use.
Thanks to the comments, I found it was a 3/32 hex wrench AND you have to adjust the small set screw that is back and to the right. See 2:59. Hope this helps someone else.
I cannot for the life of me seem to get the Allen key to grab the screw inside. I have the faucet downward and tried all different sized keys and angles and can’t get it to take hold
Great video! Can you advise where I could find another set screw or cap? I’m about to fix mine. I don’t know what I’ll find regarding the screw but the cap is gone. Than you
On a related topic: Does any manufacturer create a faucet that doesn't come loose? My Moen needs that 1:17 under-the-counter nut retighened after only one month! My Glacier Bay was fairly good that way, but had another big problem. My old Kohler had a system that occasionally needs that kind of tightening, and uses a tricky under-the-counter clamping system. Seriously, does any brand actually do this well?
Nice job! Now, please show us how to disassemble/ fix a leak when it’s happening at the head / sprayer end. I’ve got 50% coming out where it should and the other 50% on the rim of the sprayer holes. How do you break that head down for repair?
Very well done! My question is I keep having to do that tightening of the allen screw, Does it make sense to put a dab of the weak locktite or other chemical? Or would that cause any problems. Thanks much I appreciate your help
Note that MOEN faucets have a lifetime parts warranty. FREE replacement parts for life, you don't need to prove you were the original buyer. If the Moen model you have is out of production, they will ship you a complete NEW faucet if yours can't be repaired with available parts. Contact MOEN. Moen dealers can also replace your parts over the counter for FREE.
Thanks so much Danny! UR a God-send to non-mechanically-able people like me! We couldn't even see what tool was needed due to the angle & positioning of our faucet. Fixed in seconds with UR help! All God's Very Best 4 U!
Have exact same faucet. Issue is handle looses up after I've tighten and put threadlocker. My orientation is it faces up (hot) and forward for cold. Access to plug(cap) is from bottom of handle. Cartridge fine. 3x got it snug and got loose after a day or two. No visible surface stripping marks on the stud surface were 3/32 set screw makes contact. I'm scratching my head. Nice video regardless.
Thanks for this video Danny. Very helpful. I have a question before I start. My faucet was installed by someone else and I have been living with this condition: The center position of the the handle is pointing up. Pushing it away is for hot, pulling it towards me is cold. I think this position is wrong, because hot water flow is fine, cold water flow is barely running. Can you shed any light on this?
It depends on which lines they hooked up to the home’s hot and cold. It also matters whether the handle is on the right or if they swung it around so the handle is on the left. Any position works, it will just make it different on where hot and cold works
Thank you for this video. I tightened the handle, but it keeps coming loose again after about two weeks or so. How do I fix the loose part inside without putting part of a zip tie in it?
I am an 80-year-old grandma. When my faucet became loose, my daughter said to look it up on UA-cam and I would find a video showing me exactly how to fix it. Your video came right up (with my exact faucet)and I fixed it in less than 5 minutes. You saved me a bundle. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Mine needed the slotted retaining ring to be tightened. If you remove the cartridge you will see a brass slotted ring that holds the brass piece in. It’s takes a special tool to tighten, but you can use small skinny screwdrivers to stick in the slots and spin the ring around to tighten
Thank you. This faucet came with our house, and I didn’t have a manual or model # to look up. Your fix with an Allen wrench worked like a charm. I’m so glad I found your video.
You just saved me $300 on a new faucet for 1 minute worth of work. Thanks a lot!
Moan has lifetime warranties on their faucets. Or did when I bought mine like 6 years back
Thank you so much for the tutorial! The faucet handle was loose for 2 years. The maintenance guy from the apartment complex said these faucets are not adjustable. Now, I fixed it in 2 minutes. Tightened it a bit with Hex key (Allen wrench) 2.5 mm. (the position of the cap was facing the sink and I used my nails to remove the small cap)
Thank you so so much! This video is exactly what I needed! If only I had been able to discover the make/model of my faucet sooner, been living with a wicked loose handle for almost a year, lol.
Once the handle is off and you remove the trim cap, there is a brass keeper nut around the inside ring, further back than the black plastic nut. If you look carefully you will see keyway notches in the brass set nut. Insert a small screwdriver or thin tool and rotate the keeper right to tighten. That will fix the wobble without the need to insert the tie wrap.
I ended up tightening it from underneath to fix it. The copper washer was tight snd not moving
This!! Thank you!!! Tightening the brass ring fixed it! Mine was tight underneath. The brass ring took about 1/8th of a turn. It's not the brass you see right away, it's inside the faucet a bit.
This is the correct answer for my issue. I used the same allen used to remove the handle and it fit perfectly. Ended up using a 2nd allen wrench, on opposite sides, for a easy turn.
Correct!
Absolutely the correct answer. It fixed mine in no time.
1) Handle Off
2) Trim Off
3) Tighten brass ring via notch with thin flathead SD
3/32 is the correct size, and your with your video I tightened the handle in just a minute!
Thank you!!!😊
@@maryc6091
The faucet was in our Cabin which has a heavy 8 ft formica cover sitting on the kitchen drawers sets. I was able to move the entire counter and look at the back of the faucet. Turns out that this was not necessary, once I figured out how it is done. But I had to see and figure it out this was the 1st time.
However, in your case where you can't get the allen wrench into the back, it means that your faucet was installed after the counter was in place. I was afraid that I would have had to do what I am going to tell you is what either you or a professional expensive plumber will have to do.
You have to go under the sink and remove the faucet so you can get to the back of the faucet and tighten it up. This will take an amateur a couple of hours, but a professional can do it easily under an hour.
However, there is always a chance that someone with the right length allen wrench can do this without taking it all apart.
I wish you well. And I do believe in prayer in little situations - probably so I will remember where to turn in big life issues.
Took me an hour to figure out the size.
Hello
Can you share where you bought this 3/32
@@rajeshdavidjohn I bought an Eklind set on Amazon ($4.50). Its perfect for me because they are short allens. I have a corner sink with a shelf directly behind so longer allens wont work in my situation.
Thank you so much, I was frustrated for a year or two of having my kitchen faucet handle detached because I couldn't figure out how to fix it. That little cap in the back is so well hidden! now my faucet works just fine and my wife and I are so happy.
So helpful. A total newb like me was able to fix my loose faucet handle. Glad i didn't have to call a professional. Thank you!
Thanks sooo much! Fixed my mom's Moen faucet in ~10 minutes after watching your vid. I put a towel down in the sink to cover the hole (no losing the cover/cap!) and place my tools. After removing the cover/cap all I had to do was tighten the screw w/an Allen wrench... Thank you!
But what do you do when you have a wall behind your faucet and you can’t access the hole on the handle to get the cap out? Tia 😀
@@maryc6091go under the sink , loosen the ring that holds the faucet, then you can turn the whole faucet to get to it. Tighten the ring afterward.
@@Npc10010 Thank you.
@@maryc6091I have a wall behind mine and the Allen wrench still fit through the hole and seated in the screw. I didn’t have to loosen the whole thing…thankfully! By the way…mine required a 3/32 allen wrench.
Thank you for making this content. It’s exactly what I needed to fix our kitchen sink after a year (!) of having a loose handle.
Just fixed my exact faucet with your help. Highly appreciated your post. Couldn't have done it without you. Thanks.
Thank you for your video. My faucet is a Moen and it took a 3/32 Allen wrench. As a note to others who may have the issue I had….I removed the handle and thought the set screw was missing. Moen sent us a new one, but it turned out that the set screw was not easily visible and when I tried to install the new one, it wouldn’t catch. I began to inspect it further and realized the original one was still there, and only needed about 1 and a half turns with the Allen wrench. I wish I would have realized sooner because it would have saved us the time we waited for the new set screw!😊
I owe you, my dude!!!! Thank you so much for this video. First time home- (er, condo) owner in my twenties with no idea how to repair ANYTHING 😂 This video taught me two things: how to fix the faucet handle -- which worked flawlessly -- and what an allen wrench is lol!
You've used an allen key if you've ever built Ikea furniture!
Thank you so much! Saved me a call to the plumber!
Thank you! This fixed my problem without having to call an "expert"!
For the record, the correct Allen/hex Key size for the Moen MotionSense kitchen faucet is 3/32 of an inch. I just tightened the screw myself.
That size just turns with no resistance on mine. Could it really be stripped or something??
@@ruthb9117 I had to get the angle just right because the bolt was in an awkward spot-- so I had to carefully jiggle the tool until I felt it grab onto the head.
@@sethmeistergee I tried all that. Idk what to do.
@@ruthb9117 I would next try to get a view of the bolt head like with a cell phone camera you can slide under with flash. It may take a few tries but then you'll know if the head is stripped or not.
@@sethmeistergee i took a decent photo but I don’t have the skills to assess if it’s stripped or not.
This video helps me.... I already fixed our kitchen faucet within 5 minutes.... thanks bro....
Worked like a charm! 👍🏻 It was especially helpful that you shared what size allen wrench to use! Thanks so much!
That’s exactly what I was missing! Thank you so
For my faucet it's been loose dome was coming apart for a year. I had two sets of allen hex keys which were in metric none of them fit and tighten it. I bought a SAE Allen set today 3/32" is definitely a different size!!! It fitted on the first try. I hope it won't be loose ever again. Thanks for the video.
Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you! I have been trying to fix this for like 20 minutes and then you showed me what to do and I got the right Allen wrench thank you so much!!
For me, it was the assembly that was loose. I saw that you can remove the curved housing and underneath there, about a half inch back is a threaded ring with notches that you can tighten down. I had to use a relatively thin punch and small hammer to rotate it enough to stop the movement. It seems to be what tightens the handle to the vertical portion of the faucet. That's what worked for me. Thanks for the video that got me pointed in the right direction!!!
Thank you!!...for the above comments; it helped me pinpoint the exact problem we were having. I tightened that ring and all is well.
Tightening the large, outer, thin brass threaded ring, with the notches in it, is the correct way to tighten the loose assembly. Wouldn't it be nice if Moen provided a tool to properly tighten the ring?
That trick the did. The whole valve was jiggling. I tried a long pair of needle nose pliers but they were not long enough to engage both notches simultaneously. A long skinny flat head screwdriver worked well enough. This was also a good time to wash the hard water marks off the trim ring.
Thanks guys.
Thank you, we had the same thing with the loose interior and the zip tie fixed the issue! I appreciate your help!
It works, I fixed it in less than 5 minutes. You saved me a bundle. Thank you!!!👍
Thanks for a great posting = excellent camera work, very good narrative, Saved the day for me!
What worked for me was a 3/32" key, and I had to push it firmly against a small centre button for it to go into the hex socket. Then I was easily able to tighten it up. Thank you!
Thank you! Had a hard time removing the handle. Used 3/32 and worked like a charm!
definitely 3/32 in mine. thanks! lifesaver! I emained moen and instead of answering me they just mailed me a new cartridge which i do NOT need.
Same for me with 3/32
Mine too!
5/64ths was the correct allen wrench size for the American Standard Copley loose handle fix - thank you!
Great video. Good angles, fantastic explanations, and great coverage of potential problems and solutions. Super kudos, sir.
Ditto
Thank you for your help I have the SAME EXACT faucet and problem. I used your video for guidance! I found the PROBLEM!!! When you remove the plastic housing *silver around the black nut, around the sides of the black plastic nut there is a brass nut/ring with 2 slits in it. THAT is what is loose making the noise! I ended up using one of the allen wrenches, slide it into one of the slits and tap it down softly to tighten up the brass nut/ring, if you go the right way the noise will completely vanish. I think this backs out on its own after time from turning the water off and on.
That fixed it! I wonder if there is a spanner type tool that would allow me to really tighten it up?😀
My wife fixed this annoying problem in 30 seconds after watching your video. thanks
Thanks for the help. For those wondering what type of hex(Allen) key, I used a Torx Hexagon Key T10 and it worked very well.
Perfect. Quick fix. Had to place mirror under handle to guide Allen wrench. Thank you.
I was just about to call a plumber! Your a life saver!
Amazing video, just what I needed! Thank you, the handyman Danny!
Thanks, mine needed 3/32" allen wrench to tighten, and put the allen wrench in the little round hold at back of faucet handle.
FYI - it's a 3/32 wrench on mine - identical Moen
So the tinny screw that you tightened on the bottom of the faucet’s handle, Can you get a new one (screw)
This was exactly what I needed. I've had my Moen faucet for over five years, and since day one the handle would not stay fixed in any position much below full heat. The weight of the handle was enough to rotate it down to full cold. I was able to remove the handle once I knew that it was held on by a small set screw. In my case I needed to slightly tighten that 21mm nut. First, I had to break it loose (loosen it) and then I was able to slowly snug it up a few degrees at a time until the handle held position at any point.
Thank you for your very good video. I'm going to try to fix mine because my handle just falls down and hits the marble countertop. Any ideas on that? Thank you.
If it’s moen, they usually will give you free parts so if you find out what’s worn see if they will
Thank you!! It was so easy and I didn’t even have to shut off the water!
Thx for this! You saved me a couple hundred dollars
Thank you. I was afraid to find out how much disassembly would be required. I saw your video first and fixed the loose handle in about 5 seconds. No disassembly at all !!!
I’m glad you found it!
Old but still great. 3/32 Allen fixed mine thanks !
It's a 3/32 Allen wrench not the 5/64 Allen wrench. Good video to troubleshoot. Thanks!
If you happen to have the high arc moen model 87999SRS, the 3/32 Allen wrench worked to tighten the handle! This video was super helpful thank you!
Any idea how to keep it tight? Mine comes loose about once a week and it's close to the backsplash so it's a real pain to tighten. I even bent the Allen key lightning it
Did you ever figure this out? Mine loosens once a week too.
@@brandiegschmidt I contacted the company, they sent me the inner part (valve) and it had a new set screw with thread lock on it, installed (11 months go now) and it's not come loose since then. It's got a lifetime warranty.
Got tired of our kitchen faucet flopping around so found this video after much difficult seeing into the hole due to poor eyes, I tried the 5/64 Allen NO GO!
Went to a 3/32 Allen which worked like champ, tightened the handle right up! So I believe it's 3/32 Allen you probably need?
Addendum: Reading farther down in the comments others have already found the 3/32 is the correct size Allen to use.
Great video. Very clear instructions. Thanks.
Thanks for the video, one comment the set screw requires a 3/32 hex tool to loosen or tighten .
Thanks to the comments, I found it was a 3/32 hex wrench AND you have to adjust the small set screw that is back and to the right. See 2:59. Hope this helps someone else.
It's a 3/32 not a 5/64 Allen wrench you use to tighten it, easy fix, great video! Thanks Danny
Mine is a similar model as the one in the video and it needs a 5/64. I guess it depends on model. Better to buy an "SAE" set instead of metric/MM
Best to have both sets of wrenches. 😃
Thank you!! 3/32 did the trick for me 👍🏽
SAE worked for me metric won't fit I've tried all of them
Thanks for posting. It was just what I needed!
Good call on the tightening solution. Worked perfectly
I cannot for the life of me seem to get the Allen key to grab the screw inside. I have the faucet downward and tried all different sized keys and angles and can’t get it to take hold
Same, I can’t get my Allen key to grab anything in there
Thanks DJ, helped me to get my wife to shut up!😂😂😂
thank you for the easy instructions.
Thank you so much for this video! I was worried I wouldn’t be able to fix this myself, but you made it so easy.
Thanks! No idea it was a hex screw! ALL better!
Thanks for the video. I used pushpin 📌 to open the cap.
thanks so much, good advice on the 3/36 inch allen wrench, just had to fit the right wrench into that screw. appreciate it.
Thank You!! Allen wrench did the trick for me, saved a call to plumber who will charge 100$ for 5 mins job.
Thanks Danny! I saved a call to plumber!!
Thank you SO MUCH
Thank you!!!! Just tried it. Worked perfectly!
Brilliant solution - I needed to use SAE (imperial) Allen keys - metric didn't connect.
thank you this tutorial was extremely helpful i appreciate it greatly!
Do you have a video to show fixing a leaking spout for this faucet?
Hey thanks this is really a useful video 👏👌but in my case the tiny little cap is missing🙄is there anyway to fix it!? TIA
I would check the closest hardware store and see if they have one (or want to give you the display model cap lol)
I followed this but used a 3/32 Allen wrench/hex key
Thank you,this truly help me
Great video! Can you advise where I could find another set screw or cap? I’m about to fix mine. I don’t know what I’ll find regarding the screw but the cap is gone. Than you
On a related topic: Does any manufacturer create a faucet that doesn't come loose? My Moen needs that 1:17 under-the-counter nut retighened after only one month! My Glacier Bay was fairly good that way, but had another big problem. My old Kohler had a system that occasionally needs that kind of tightening, and uses a tricky under-the-counter clamping system. Seriously, does any brand actually do this well?
My handle all of the sudden is harder to turn on, any hints as to why that would happen. Thanks for any input
If all else fails, moen is guaranteed for life. Just call them and they’ll send you a new one.
Nice job! Now, please show us how to disassemble/ fix a leak when it’s happening at the head / sprayer end. I’ve got 50% coming out where it should and the other 50% on the rim of the sprayer holes. How do you break that head down for repair?
Hello
Thank you for sharing this knowledge !!!!
Where can I buy this Allen screw to fix my faucet ?
Hardware stores should have something, or calling the brand of faucet if you know it
Thank you so much for sharing! It worked well!
Very well done! My question is I keep having to do that tightening of the allen screw, Does it make sense to put a dab of the weak locktite or other chemical? Or would that cause any problems. Thanks much I appreciate your help
Yes, blue locktite would be perfect
Danny! It’s been so long since I’ve seen any of your videos. Hope you’ve been doing well, thanks for making this video
top quality video Danny! Thanks for such a clear and helpful guide.
Are Ziptie foodsafe?
Was your faucet leaking or just loose. Mine is leaking right at the handle
Note that MOEN faucets have a lifetime parts warranty. FREE replacement parts for life, you don't need to prove you were the original buyer. If the Moen model you have is out of production, they will ship you a complete NEW faucet if yours can't be repaired with available parts. Contact MOEN. Moen dealers can also replace your parts over the counter for FREE.
Thank you SO much!!!!
Thanks so much Danny! UR a God-send to non-mechanically-able people like me! We couldn't even see what tool was needed due to the angle & positioning of our faucet. Fixed in seconds with UR help! All God's Very Best 4 U!
How do I get new spray hose with spray nozzle to go in so I can connect it below
Appreciate the info Danny! Tighting the set screw worked like champ
My issue is tightening the base to the counter you didn't talk about that and said you were going to is it supposed to somewhere else?
Dr. Horton house? I have the same exact faucet and top LOL. Also, same exact problem haha. Thanks for the tip. Time to get an allen key.
Have exact same faucet. Issue is handle looses up after I've tighten and put threadlocker. My orientation is it faces up (hot) and forward for cold. Access to plug(cap) is from bottom of handle. Cartridge fine. 3x got it snug and got loose after a day or two. No visible surface stripping marks on the stud surface were 3/32 set screw makes contact. I'm scratching my head. Nice video regardless.
Have you found a fix for this yet? If so, please let me know; got same problem
I tightened the set screw but it keeps working itself loose. stripped ??
Thanks for this video Danny. Very helpful. I have a question before I start. My faucet was installed by someone else and I have been living with this condition: The center position of the the handle is pointing up. Pushing it away is for hot, pulling it towards me is cold. I think this position is wrong, because hot water flow is fine, cold water flow is barely running. Can you shed any light on this?
It depends on which lines they hooked up to the home’s hot and cold. It also matters whether the handle is on the right or if they swung it around so the handle is on the left. Any position works, it will just make it different on where hot and cold works
太好啦!不懂英语也可以学习,并且把花洒修好,谢谢分享!
Thank you for the demonstration. What size is the set screw that fixes to the lever ?
Can you please make a video about how to loosen a tight faucet handle. Thank you!
Great video thank you .
Mine needs a 3/32 Allen key. Otherwise, perfect explanation. Thanks!
Thanks! Mine was 3/32”.
Thank you for this video. I tightened the handle, but it keeps coming loose again after about two weeks or so. How do I fix the loose part inside without putting part of a zip tie in it?
Following
How would you go about fixing a leak if it’s coming from the black thing on the faucet