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   I am repairing my hot tub, and have a bit of an impasse.
   The original drain fitting, I learned the hard way, wasn't screwed 
into the threaded port on a T-junction. It was one size too small, so 
the manufacturer just epoxied it in the hole.
   I learned the hard way when it was leaking and I tried to twist to 
tighten it, and it snapped off in my hand. (the tub is in my basement so 
it was quite a mess)
   The original threads are probably unusable because of the blob of 
epoxy in there.
   Cutting out the section is an option, but it's in a complicated 
section so it would be hard to splice.
   How hard would it be to tap them for new threads? There's enough 
plastic to drill out and go a little bigger. The resulting hole would 
probably work to be about the size of a garden hose thread or one step 
larger...
   I've done a lot of tapping with metal, but I've never done it with 
pipe threads before. (which are conical, aren't they?)
   Is there a simple hand tool I could buy and have at it? It's just 
soft plastic so I know it'll cut, I'm just unsure how it works with pipe 
threads instead of parallel threads.
-- 
Trevor Boicey, P. Eng.
Ottawa, Canada, tboicey@brit.ca
ICQ #17432933 http://www.brit.ca/~tboicey/
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