No Tools Garden Hose Connect
Introduction
I have tried a lot of different ways of connecting garden hoses together. This includes a bunch of different snap fittings. They seem attractive but have some downsides:
- Tend to leak.
- Tend to break.
- Need to use same type of connection on all hoses
- Not cheap.
- Restrict the flow
So I have gone back to the simple screw together connections. There are two major issues with them:
- Take longer to connect.
- Too often you cannot get a good grip and need tools.
The Fix
Many brands of hose have figured this out with a better handle on the female end of the hose. But these are not always the brands I want. The solution? One name is the Hose Nut, or the Hose Wrench. A picture makes it clear:
This is a 3D printed part that often needs to be customized to the hose because:
- Some hoses end with cross sections of hexagons, others octogons, and finally some circles.
- The different ends are different sizes.
So I have created a small set of parameterized models in FreeCad that you can use to print a Hose Nut to fit your particular hose.
Tools Needed
- FreeCad .... This is a free download, runs on most OSs.
- 3D Printer, mine is a very inexpensive Tronxy, see: 200 Dollar Printer Kits Russ's 3D Printers
Design Details
Lets look at one of the models. Open up ..... You should see a representation of the nut. In the model view you should see something called nut_dims. Double click on it and you will open a new tab for the spreadsheet that controls the size of the nut.
- Height of the nut. 15 mm seems to work well for me, but measure your hose.
- Inner radius -- this is the dimension that must fit the nut. I try to get within .01 mm of the "right" size if I can. You want a tight but not hard fit over the end of the hose.
- Outer radius -- this is not very important, but if too large "eats up the fingers", too small and the part is weak.
The part in the model you want to print is the: the_nut. To print it you need to:
- dimension it in the spreadsheet.
- make a mesh of it
- export the mesh as an *.stl file.
This work flow is discussed in:
Fasten to the Hose
I have used epoxy for most of my hoses, but I have now added the option for a 3m machine screw and trapped nut. Take your choice. There is not much force on this connection, most of the force is twisting and is taken care of by the geometry of the part and the good fit.