That's kind of what I'm hoping for here.Unless someone has worked on that specific model...
I could live without that shower functioning for as long as it takes to find replacement parts. If that's all that mattered I would have had the valve completely disassembled already.... concerns about not having a shower for days...
Seriously? I keep alternating between feeling really stupid and then having the occasional flash of d'oh!The problem is that there is no shutoff valve to isolate just the shower. I would need to turn off the water to the entire house...
Here's how I arrived at that assumption.They are not there to be used as shut offs...
Me neither (obviously). But I'm gradually learning.Again my friend, I am not a plumber...
I've been working up my nerve to do this, one small step at a time. I'm really not a try it and "see what happens" type of guy. I prefer to step back, have another cup of coffee, and take some time to think about it and analyze each step until I'm confident there shouldn't be any bad consequences before pulling the pin on a potential grenade.Those are internal stops built into the diverter so you can shut the water off at the diverter instead of disrupting service to other parts of the building tighten them up and see what happens if it stops the water good to go if it doesn't turn off the main simple as can be
The dirverter valves are just that, they divert water only. All your pressure and flow starts and stops with the main valve.
Thermostat Control Only
Must use with separate volume control
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