Office of Steam Logo_1

Author Topic: How to remove Jensen boiler nut!?!  (Read 2051 times)

  • Global Moderator
  • Engineer
  • *****
  • Posts: 5150
  • Wherever you go ......... there you are!
  • Location: Eastern Sierra
Re: How to remove Jensen boiler nut!?!
« on: January 21, 2024, 06:11:15 pm »
Here are a couple of hints that may help, but first please be sure that you are trying to turn in a counter-clockwise direction to unscrew the nut-ring.

If that is true, then first I would try to turn it a little in the clockwise direction with a fair amount of force to see if you get any movement at all in a tightening direction. If so, you should probably be able to work it back and forth, clockwise / counter-clockwise, with ever increasing movement, until it finally keeps unscrewing.

Next up, use something a bit stiffer than the rather flimsy material provided by Jensen, which is actually quite adequate under normal circumstances, but is too soft when up against a stuck nut. I have had some luck using a pair of needle nose pliers as a sort of pin spanner wrench, but care must be taken not to slip out of the slots as you will almost certainly mar the surface of the boiler face if you do so. A flat piece of stiffer steel sized like the Jensen tool is a far better idea, clamped in a vise, such that the boiler is twisted with good down pressure to insure the "wrench" stays in the ring nut slots while turning.

A small blunt chisel and hammer driving the ring nut slots. Again alternating directions of drift to "loosen" it up, then going back to the "tool" to unscrew the rest of the way.

Before you totally mangle your ring nut, or if you already have, it is wise to get a couple of replacement for that and the glass too, as spares to have on hand for future needs. If you have them, you'll likely never need them, but if you don't, then of course you will. Murphy's law you know!

Finally, if you must, after damaging the slots too far for them to be of any further use, you can just cut the ring nut out, carefully so as not to damage the boiler's threads, and replace it with the spare mentioned above.

One final thought is to be sure and use some anti-seize compound on the threads when reinstalling and consider switching to Teflon gasket rings on both sides of the glass at the same time, instead of the fiber ring gaskets supplied. I like older style plumbers Teflon paste, the lumpy kind with the brownish oil that separates out and found it to be very serviceable over the long haul.

Best of luck and keep us informed of your progress. 
"Information is not knowledge, Knowledge is not wisdom, Wisdom is not truth, Truth is not beauty, Beauty is not love, Love is not music: Music is THE BEST...   
Wisdom is the domain of the Wis (which is extinct). Beauty is a French phonetic corruption of a short cloth neck ornament currently in resurgence..."
F. Zappa ... by way of Mary, the girl from the bus.