Heater - Stripped exchanger drain plug

carlos31820

0
LifeTime Supporter
Nov 22, 2010
413
Midland, Georgia
I have a Jandy Legacy 250 natural gas heater. On the left side of the heater, there is a polymer/plastic threaded drain plug (part 43 in the diagram below). I have partially stripped this drain plug and now water squirts out whenever the pump is running. I have it holding right now by using some teflon tape. I'm about to order a replacement plug hoping its the plug itself and not the polymer housing on the heat exchanger. If a new plug doesnt do the trick, is there a way to fix this short of glueing the plug permanently in? I live in Georgia and dont close the pool for winter so I dont really have a need to drain the exchanger.

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I've got a Teledyne Laars 175K BTU NG unit with brass drain plugs. A couple of years ago, the pool closing company managed to strip the threads in the plug hole. My temporary solution was a cork. Bought a bag full in various sizes and crammed in the one that fit best. Worked so well (no leaks!) that I haven't actually repaired it yet.

I realize that's shade tree mechanicing at best, but....

Good luck!
 
It appears from the shopping site picture that the plug uses straight threads with an o-ring seal. The sealing is meant to be accomplished by the o-ring only, so as long as your threads can compress the o-ring well enough, you should be OK. If what really happened is you cross threaded the plug, and the o-ring isn't being compressed evenly, because the plug is tilted, then re-threading the header so the thread is straight would be a good approach. If the threads are so bad that there's very little plastic left to thread, then you could install a Helicoill or other brand threaded repair insert.

Another, possibly simpler way is to use a test plug. These are sort of universal fit devices with expanding rubber bushings. Check out what Mcmaster-Carr has. I'd choose something that had a temperature range up to 250F.

http://www.mcmaster.com/#expansion-test-plugs/=m8iirk
 
gtemkin said:
Another, possibly simpler way is to use a test plug. These are sort of universal fit devices with expanding rubber bushings. Check out what Mcmaster-Carr has. I'd choose something that had a temperature range up to 250F.

http://www.mcmaster.com/#expansion-test-plugs/=m8iirk

Im posting an update for anyone else who may have this problem. I also want to give credit to gtemkin for his brilliant suggestion to try a test plug.

I ordered mcmaster part number 9191T33. It's a half inch 302 stainless steel plug rated to 250 degrees.

It works perfectly. Photos below showing the test plug next to the original teflon-tape covered plug and an additional photo showing the test plug inserted in the heater.

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Glad it worked and you were able to find something that fit so well. I have an english car hobby, which demands an open mind to stopping leaks of oil, coolant, brake fluid and smoke (from wires :) ).

Only caution I have is that the toggle clamp force not be too much because then you'd be putting a severe outward force on the plastic; but that's something you can judge fairly well when you clamp it and as long as you're not having to hit the lever with a hammer you're likely just fine for the long term.
 
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