Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

99% of People Use This Tool Wrong…Are You?

Plumbing tools are designed to do specific jobs quickly and safely. Yet, in a rush or lacking the proper equipment, many tradespeople use whatever is at hand—risking damaged fixtures, personal injury, or wasted time. Below are the top misused tools and how to swap them out for the right ones.

1. Safety Glasses vs. Full Goggles or Face Shields

The Wrong Approach
Relying on simple Z87 safety glasses when grinding, cutting, or working under sinks with debris flying around.

The Right Approach

  • Mono Goggles: Provide a seal around the eyes, blocking particles from all angles.
  • Face Shield + Goggles: Offers comprehensive eye and face protection, especially for metal sparks or chemical splashes.

2. Pipe Wrench as a Hammer or Pry Bar

The Wrong Approach
Using a pipe wrench to pound nails or lever something open.

The Right Approach

  • Actual Hammer for pounding.
  • Proper Pry Bar for leverage.
  • A pipe wrench is designed to grip round pipes and fittings. Applying torque in a different function can break the wrench or injure your hand.

3. Adjustable Pliers as a Cutter

The Wrong Approach
Snipping wire or trimming materials with the jaws of adjustable pliers, which dulls and damages them.

The Right Approach

  • Dedicated Wire Cutters or snips for cutting metal, wire, or plastic.
  • Channel locks / Adjustable Pliers only for gripping and turning, not slicing.

4. Teflon Tape Overload

The Wrong Approach
Wrapping Teflon tape excessively around threads. This can bunch up, distort threads, or cause leaks rather than preventing them.

The Right Approach

  • 3–4 Wraps Max for standard thickness tape.
  • Pull the tape snug but don’t overstretch it to the point it thins out.
  • Apply in the correct direction (clockwise if you’re facing the pipe end) so tightening the fitting doesn’t unravel the tape.

5. Plunger vs. Closet Auger

The Wrong Approach
Using a plunger for everything—even when a solid object is lodged in the toilet.

The Right Approach

  • Plunger: Works best on soft blockages or partial clogs.
  • Closet Auger: Ideal for fishing out foreign objects or deeper blockages that a plunger can’t dislodge.
  • If an object is solid, forcing a plunger can push it deeper and complicate the fix.

6. Small Drain Snake vs. Sewer Machine

The Wrong Approach
Persisting with a light-duty drain snake on major blockages or large-diameter drains.

The Right Approach

  • Small Snake: Good for minor clogs in sinks, tubs, or showers.
  • Professional Sewer Machine: For bigger lines, recurring clogs, or more severe blockages.
  • Using a snake too aggressively can damage the pipe if the clog is too large or the snake is too flimsy.

7. Copper Pipe Cutters on the Wrong Material

The Wrong Approach
Forcing a copper tubing cutter through PVC, CPVC, or cast iron—dulling blades and possibly wrecking the tool.

The Right Approach

  • Copper Tubing Cutter: For copper pipes only.
  • Plastic Pipe Cutter: Specifically for PVC, CPVC, PEX.
  • Cast Iron Cutter or Sawzall: For cutting cast iron or heavily corroded metal pipes.

Conclusion

Choosing the right tool (and using it correctly) saves you from frustration, extra costs, and potential injuries. While improvising occasionally happens in the trades, make it the exception rather than the rule. With minimal planning and the correct gear, you’ll work more efficiently and keep your tools (and yourself) in top shape.

Leave a comment

Cart0
Cart0
Cart0