
EFIELD Höger Push Fit 1/4 Turn Angle Stop Valve Water Shut Off 1/2 Push x 3/8 Inch Compression Chrome
Brand: EFIELD Höger
Features:
- Directly from The Famous Plumbing Systems Manufacture
- 5 PCS Lead Free Brass Fittings Size 1/2 Inch push x 3/8 Inch Comp and 1/4 Turn on/off
- Fit Copper, PEX, CPVC and PE-RT Pipe
- 200 PSI and 200 Degrees F. Use in Potable Water and Hydronic Heating Applications.
- No Tools, No Soldering, No Crimping or Glue. Push to Connect
Details: Directly from The Famous Pex Systems Manufacture 5 PCS Lead Free Brass Fittings Size 1/2 Inch push x 3/8 Inch Comp and 1/4 Turn on/off Fit Copper, PEX, CPVC and PE-RT Pipe 200 PSI and 200 Degrees F. Use in Potable Water and Hydronic Heating Applications. No Tools, No Soldering, No Crimping or Glue. Push to Connect
Customer reviews
Showing 1-6 Of 6 Reviews
Bruce P.: Better than Sharkbite.
Follow the YouTube SharkBite video for installation instructions. These are so easy to install. Simply remove the old fixtures and push these on. No brass compression fittings to deal with and no leaks. Great product and service.
Anthony L: Excellent very nice
Excellent very nice
Steve: Works for me!
Works as advertised..
dawhoda♧♤♡◇: Works for everything EXCEPT galvanized steel piping
They were the wrong ones for me because I have the older galvanized steel pipes and these work for pretty much of the rest, including copper, PEX,+PVC
W. Gardner: Not quite a Shark Bite
Not as solid as "Shark Bites" . Shark Bite valves have a very short on and off handle, it also turns hard. If you had to turn if off to stop a leak you might have problems depending on where it is mounted.. This Efield valve turns easier and has a handle that is larger. The overall construction is in favor of the Shark Bites.
claudia: Ridiculous design
WHOOSH! It's 4am and the sudden sound of water pouring out wakes me up. Quickly move towards the direction of the sound: guest room bathroom toilet hose has broken, water pouring out the tank, water gushing out the hose onto my face. I quickly try to close the valve connection, but it's too hard to turn.After drying everything up, I go onto Amazon to not only buy a new tank supply line, but also a shut off valve that would actually be able to be closed quickly in case of a similar event in the future. I read the reviews and felt compelled to buy this valve given how "easy" and "smart" design is supposed to be.Easy to install? Yes, you just push it in and you are done. However, apparently if you do not have a perfectly even end, this will leak. And I mean PERFECT, because no matter what I did, I could not manage to get the pipe good enough to be able place this so that it wouldn't leak. OK, so maybe I have a defective valve, right? Well, this is the reason I decided not to return it for a functional pipe and just go back to the good all screw system.It spins!! At first I thought the reason it was leaking was because I couldn't get it positioned well enough so that it would stop spinning (some angles, it behaved just fine, but if I touched it, it would move and leak). So I went on to the good-old questions section and asked what I was doing wrong. Well, the answer was NOTHING! To my surprise, someone thought that a valve that spins around is perfectly fine design! So, 4AM, water gushing out onto my face, I would need to just deal with the water and find a way to grab the valve with both my hands in order to twist the valve the 1/4 turn (you just cannot turn this with just one hand)? Heck no!I do not know how many of you have ample space behind your toilet or below your sinks to maneuver to the valve with both your hands to make this functional. Maybe this are designed to be used for something else? I have a free valve to give away if you want to give it a try.