jack of all wrote: » Where is the water dripping from? Is it coming from the tap itself or from where the tap body enters the butt? I had a leak from the tap where it entered the butt which was easily solved. The lock nut on the inside of the barrel is only plastic and gave a poor grip plus the washers supplied were rubbish. I was able to replace this with a standard brass tap back nut (1/2", available from DIY or any plumbers merchant) combined with replacement fibre washer and bit of silicone on the inside for good measure. No drips no, 2 years on. If the tap itself is dripping it may be just a bit of grit in the tap body, separate the two parts and give them a clean, spray a little silicone lubricant inside and reassemble.
Thoie wrote: » If you can't fix the tap, could you just put a bit of hosepipe from the tap back into the water barrel? You might need to drill a hole in the top to put the hose in, but if it's staying there permanently, a bit of sugru will make the top water-tight.
dodzy wrote: » You could possibly change the stock plastic tap for one of these.....
2012paddy2012 wrote: » Ok if I attach hose to the tap - then run it up along the exterior of barrell ? Just the hole then if I drill it is just to keep water back in barrell until required? Sounds veryhandy workable and do able thks Will try it later
jack of all wrote: » You could, but I reckon the butt would need a reinforcement plate (as used in attic storage tanks for ballcocks) to resist movement and accommodate the weight.
Thoie wrote: » I've had a rethink, and it's a bad idea - will explain later.
Thoie wrote: » So my other genius idea is a short length of hose from the tap to the existing drain on the left. Fix the hose down neatly along the wall (leaving yourself enough wiggle room at the tap end), so you can just take the hose on and off easily. I'd also use a hoselock type connection on the tap end, so that you won't be yanking and pulling at the tap each time.