Vince, stop apologizing already. This series is impressive. It must be a ton of work and we all know what is usually going on in real life this close to the holidays. So thanks again and keep it coming. 👍
Yeah, not all fixes are going to be complex, or possible for that matter. Some of the videos you've done in this series could have counted as 2 or 3 videos you could have scheduled, but you're playing on Hardcore Difficulty, and totally killing it, too.
I agree. I watch some TH-camrs who put out videos every single day without fail, and with that kind of a schedule you're not going to get a perfect video every single day, but we can assure you they are still interesting to watch. Keep them coming at whatever pace works for you, and don't feel like you have to apologize. I feel like people are often their own worst critic.
I would use a short length of aluminium or brass tube internally to join the valve then jbweld around the join externally. Loving the series no matter how broken or not the items are👍👍
Absolutely no need to apologise Vince!! You’re doing an outstanding job with this advent fix!! Thank you so much for the really entertaining videos & for giving us the confidence to have a go at trying to diagnose & repair household items ourselves. Best wishes to you & your family 🙏☺️
Exactly what I also was thinking. Glue and food is not a good combination. Even if the fix works. You don't want to get the chemicals from the glue near your food.
Good call on that valve - I wouldn't attempt to glue / epoxy it either - because you could get particals of the glue etc leaking into the drink over time... That might seem unlikely, but I am sure trace amounts would free up with liquid pressure and temperature over time. Seeing the epoxy at the end there - don't be put off for the sake of fixing it lol. I just personally wouldn't fancy drinking coffee that has come into contact with any kind of epoxy etc. Great video Vince =D The pace you are maintaining :o
Vince, I have appreciated the videos. Even the quick fixes (even the ones you call boring) are interesting as far as I am concerned. Keep up the great work!!!
No need to apologize, Vince! I, for one enjoyed watching this video! Same as your other video with the lamp and game boy. Not every video is an amazing fix. And it doesn’t have to be! I still enjoy seeing the process to diagnose problems on such a wide range of products. And I know how hard it is to record, produce and deliver videos. You’ve done that day after day for the past almost three weeks! Give yourself plenty of credit for the series. Don’t burn yourself out trying to make videos you think will please everyone. If they want to have an issue with a video, so be it. You do you, and the rest of us will be here to enjoy it and support you!
Bonus points awarded if you don a white boilersuit doused with red paint and run into the living room with the trimmer at the kids and say "Daddy's here... who's for a haircut!"
Nice fault finding at least :) Personally, with devices dealing with anything to eat or drink, only fix is to replace broken part with a new one. I'd always doubt glued parts, suspecting that something toxic could leak or mix into the final food product.
the coffee machine is well worth a watch as they are so commonplace now and I'm always happy to see a Bosch tool fix as I have a soft spot for them too
There's always a bit of extra length on tubes in those things, 2 zip ties and a short bit of tube totally would work. Like adding a filter to a motorcycle gas line. :)
@@TheREALDocRabbit Yeah exactly :) sorry for my English. I meant tube by hose. But there must be enough black plastic piece left on both sides for zipties to hold on.
I'm subscribed to a lot of channels and occasionally I've skipped some videos because sometimes it feels that the content is a bit repetitive, but in your case I look forward to every upload and this series is some of the best content I've seen in my life. Great job Vince, you're officially my favorite youtuber.
I certainly enjoy all your videos, Vince, including this one. As I fumble my way through trying to make videos myself, I also understand that there is an awful lot of work involved.
plastic weld the little pipe using zip ties as a filler material and your most unloved soldering iron. Melt a straightened paperclip cutoff into both sides to add some strength. Bodge!
Vince, I think everyone watching enjoys your videos, that's why we all watch you, it doesn't matter if there is no fix in the end, it's what we learn along the way
J.B. Weld or super glue might work for the video repair, and it might not leak. But after that I wouldn't use it for making coffee. I'd be worried about chemicals leaching into the water. I love you videos. You are so enthusiastic it's contagious. I learned to do some house repairs after watching my dad, (at 90 he doesn't do that very much anymore). I think that's why I like watching your videos. I'm a PC tech and love taking things apart. Took me a long time before I didn't have any left over screws.
Excellent, interesting as we have just bought one of those Tassimo machines to replace our old one which blew up which replaced the previous one and the one before that. Will make a note about that JB weld stuff and see how you get on with it.
I've got one of those Bosche clippers. They are great for topiary, clipping your hedge into interesting ornamental shapes. Good to know what to do if it jams!
You videos are always interesting. I think I did watch a video of the paint drying on the Roller. I use a Tassimo for my daily cup. I believe that is a pressure relief valve. There is a huge support community for refillable pods and DIY beverages. thanks for what you do. Ho Ho Ho! JB Weld is awesome. Epoxy and time will cost more than a new valve :-)))))
The barcode tells it what temperature and amount of water to output. I use mine with the descaling disc with a custom barcode stuck over the top (can find a breakdown of all the barcodes on google) just for a hot cup of water for making things like instant soup, tea or instant coffee. Cheaper than buying pods 😂 on the trimmers you should have replicated the issue and made it lock up. Good fixes again tho 👍
Very impressed by Bosch having a parts diagram and spares for the machine even if sadly they're not worthwhile at the cost. Ive been trying to repair a Sage (Breville) Barista Express and theres no parts diagrams and the only parts widely available are solenoids & motors. All the connectors that carry water seem to be custom and its an absolute nightmare trying to find compatible parts or to convert it over to something more widely available
Still loving this series Vince - Hopefully its not being a chore for you too much doing these all at the same time because that takes the fun out of it too! (unless its 'extra' repair videos you have done during the year and saved them all up to schedule on YT each December day?) Thanks again Vince - and thanks to your family if they have to be quiet around the house if you are busy filming lol
Vince, we love what you do regardless. Pumping out so many videos in a row is in itself a massive amount of work. Awesome! Can I just say what one of the other commenters has said, in that I think you could fix the Tassimo by getting some thin brass tube that would go outside the broken plastic tube and use epoxy to glue it over what is there. Epoxy would be water and steam proof. I'm sure there is a re-visit in it? Keep up the great work!
Hi Vince. Long time viewer. I think your fixes are awesome!! Absolutely no need to apologize for anything!! I always look forward to seeing you drop a new video!! Great job keeping up all these fixes!!!!! Love your channel!!!😊😊😊😊😊
Sometimes you can help the JB weld to hold using thin steel wire, strong synthetic thread, tissue or anything you can imagine. It works like the reinforce bars work on concrete. In the case of tubes like that, if you can find a metal tube from a portable radio antenna or anything similar, you can sleeve the plastic part to hold the pressure and fix it externally with epoxy to hold the whole piece together. Not for money, of course, just for the sake of fixing.
You know, people would jump in joy and do 3 cartwheels around the kitchen table when they buy stuff that is advertised as broken but it works when they get it :) But not Vince... He want's the broken stuff.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I don't know what kind of plastic that coffee machine part is made of, but I think I'd try melting the pieces a bit and try to bond them like that. As others say, glue might not be a good choice here, since the machine is making things you drink. It could be okay to strengthen the outside, but not the inside. Also, the pressure and heat might break the bond of the glue over time. As someone else mentioned, a food-safe tube could also be a possible fix, as long as you can tighten it. A few zip-ties might do wonders.
This series is impressive. It’s like eating an elephant, you can only do it one bite at a time. The spares situation is always the toughest part. And it’s only getting harder because of the price of new equipment is so low. How companies can make a profit on a new unit I don’t know. I’ve seen J-B weld being used in so many videos it must be very useful. I would have thought that using a drill bit to line up the 2 pieces would make attaching them together easier. Maybe grease the drill bit very lightly first would also be a good idea. Well done so far Vince 👏
You can use a small piece of copper or brass tubing with an outside diameter as close as you can get to the inside diameter of the broken tube to bridge the brake in the plastic then epoxy it together. I do something similar with steel tubing when I need to weld 2 pieces of tubing end to end and have a strong joint.
Great video Vince! My only concern would be drinking coffee that had boiling water running over the epoxy or JB Weld, I am unsure if any of them would be food safe especially at higher temps. I would feel bad if you were to get sick, or maybe I am just overthinking it. Either way, great video mate!
Hey if you can find a plastic pipe with the same OD as the ID of the broken part, you could sleeve it use the plastic weld to fix it, and that should fix the pressure issue as the pressure would be trying to push the sleeve out
"Don't wanna get the box wet" wife be like oh yeah save the box but please continue to waterboard my kitchen Vince lol I think that bosch trimmer fix is worth the money, just think how many of these things bought for people at xmas and not used till that 30 day not our problem amazon types hide behind kicks in and boom more landfill bet that ain't in the typical ruthless efficiency german handbook that come with it, normally 300 dialects but not the right information you need, smart fix Vince!
Hi Vince JB weld will have held if you roughly rough up the area on the part it will have something to bite into also I used JB to fill a hold on engine blocks and other such parts in the past maybe a come back part two on a quick fix maybe otherwise keep the vods coming 😊😊😊
ive been looking forward to watching the advent video every day, its going to be sad when this is over and have to wait for a video for an unknown amount of time lol
Bosch are great for spare parts. I repaired Bosch tools for a few years, they have diagrams for everything. Normally you can order every individual part down to single nuts and bolts. Some parts can be expensive making repairs uneconomical but thats the way companies are these days!
Get a piece of brass tube same diameter as the tube where the break is, then cut about 10mm long, file some cuts for the tube sticking up, then assemble with araldite making sure the bits are butted together, ace bodge.
Quick note, thanks for the mention of the JB weld. If it was the end of the world, and you absolutely had to fix it... I would probably suggest a tiny piece of brass tubing 6-7mm long with the OD similar to the ID of the plastic tube. Then use that as a stint to add support for a massive JB weld botch job. But as you said, no way worth the effort.
There is a product called Milliput putty that can set under water and is heat resistant to 130⁰C. I have used it on a kettle, hose pipe and a bath tub. It would work good on the Tassimo
Just wondering about the safety of using JB Weld to repair that part. I have no knowledge of JB Weld and its qualities but wonder if it would provide a potable repair?
Usually think of bosch as upper mid range. 1 tier below Miele and the like but good quality for a mid range price but now they seem to have a much bigger range and theres quite a quality difference as you go up the range. They do quite well in quality and reliability surveys but cheaper plastics do seem to be used in newer stuff. There's stuff thats quite flimsy feeling in my new bosch dishwasher like tablet tray/dispenser compared to my 13 year old bosch washing machine of which virtually nothing is flimsy. The shell itself is rusting a little now but no repairs have been needed in much use. Only time will tell if the dishwasher lasts as long. Over 10 years for a 2010s appliance is good in my view. Hopefully if they at least keep the parts for it should something snap it'll be easy to fix.
I would be careful using JB Weld to fix that coffee machine, if any JB Weld can come into contact with the water passing through the pipe it will leech into the water which is not something you want to be drinking. You can buy JB Kwik Weld in the large tubes like you purchased the original formulation in, you get a much larger quantity and is cheaper than the syringe.
I would verify those adhesives are food safe. In this instance you're just doing a temporary fix, but for long term use I'd be concerned about leeching of bad stuff from the adhesive.
Vince, stop apologizing already. This series is impressive. It must be a ton of work and we all know what is usually going on in real life this close to the holidays. So thanks again and keep it coming. 👍
I agree. Good job vince.
I learned what the inside of a Bosch hand trimmer looks like and that there is a channel called Fred in the Shed. Something new!
Yeah, not all fixes are going to be complex, or possible for that matter. Some of the videos you've done in this series could have counted as 2 or 3 videos you could have scheduled, but you're playing on Hardcore Difficulty, and totally killing it, too.
I agree. I watch some TH-camrs who put out videos every single day without fail, and with that kind of a schedule you're not going to get a perfect video every single day, but we can assure you they are still interesting to watch. Keep them coming at whatever pace works for you, and don't feel like you have to apologize. I feel like people are often their own worst critic.
I agree, I am looking forward to tomorrow's already. And yes I did enjoy this one.
No need to beat yourself up, Vince. I, for one, enjoyed this video. 👍
75% of the way done, almost there, Vince - seriously impressive effort! 🥳🎉 I've been thoroughly enjoying this series and will be so sad to see it end.
Don't apologise Vince us fans of the channel would watch a video of paint drying if you uploaded it. Keep up the great series.
your ability to get all these videos out in a row is impressive!
I would use a short length of aluminium or brass tube internally to join the valve then jbweld around the join externally. Loving the series no matter how broken or not the items are👍👍
Absolutely no need to apologise Vince!! You’re doing an outstanding job with this advent fix!! Thank you so much for the really entertaining videos & for giving us the confidence to have a go at trying to diagnose & repair household items ourselves. Best wishes to you & your family 🙏☺️
Epoxy and JB weld aren’t food safe a safer fixer would be a short length of silicon tube pushed over the two broken bits to join them together
Exactly what I also was thinking. Glue and food is not a good combination. Even if the fix works. You don't want to get the chemicals from the glue near your food.
JB Weld is non toxic once cured. Although not “food safe” it shouldn’t come into contact with the water if it is on the outside.
"This doesn't look like it's fixable" is what you hear right before Vince is about to do the most incredible bodge job you've ever seen
Good call on that valve - I wouldn't attempt to glue / epoxy it either - because you could get particals of the glue etc leaking into the drink over time... That might seem unlikely, but I am sure trace amounts would free up with liquid pressure and temperature over time. Seeing the epoxy at the end there - don't be put off for the sake of fixing it lol. I just personally wouldn't fancy drinking coffee that has come into contact with any kind of epoxy etc. Great video Vince =D The pace you are maintaining :o
Anything with Vince is a joy to watch.
Thanks Vince you have helped me come up with my father's Christmas present as he is 80 and loves gardening 😂
Vince, I have appreciated the videos. Even the quick fixes (even the ones you call boring) are interesting as far as I am concerned. Keep up the great work!!!
No need to apologize, Vince! I, for one enjoyed watching this video! Same as your other video with the lamp and game boy. Not every video is an amazing fix. And it doesn’t have to be! I still enjoy seeing the process to diagnose problems on such a wide range of products. And I know how hard it is to record, produce and deliver videos. You’ve done that day after day for the past almost three weeks!
Give yourself plenty of credit for the series. Don’t burn yourself out trying to make videos you think will please everyone. If they want to have an issue with a video, so be it. You do you, and the rest of us will be here to enjoy it and support you!
It’s always a pleasure to see you work. Even if the fix is easy, it’s still very entertaining. Best wishes from the USA!
Don't be so hard on yourself vincc. I have more than enjoyed all the videos an 1 a day is a proper treat . Merry Xmas
Bonus points awarded if you don a white boilersuit doused with red paint and run into the living room with the trimmer at the kids and say "Daddy's here... who's for a haircut!"
I'm loving the series. Thank you 🪛🔧
Nice fault finding at least :)
Personally, with devices dealing with anything to eat or drink, only fix is to replace broken part with a new one. I'd always doubt glued parts, suspecting that something toxic could leak or mix into the final food product.
Can't wait for your videos...keep up the great work
the coffee machine is well worth a watch as they are so commonplace now and I'm always happy to see a Bosch tool fix as I have a soft spot for them too
You might simply bypass the crack with a tiny bit of hose and a couple of zipties if you have enough amount of excess plastic left on both parts.
There's always a bit of extra length on tubes in those things, 2 zip ties and a short bit of tube totally would work. Like adding a filter to a motorcycle gas line. :)
@@TheREALDocRabbit Yeah exactly :) sorry for my English. I meant tube by hose. But there must be enough black plastic piece left on both sides for zipties to hold on.
I enjoyed this video! ❤. It's such an amazing thing you're doing for us putting out a video every day. Thank you Vince 🥰
I'm subscribed to a lot of channels and occasionally I've skipped some videos because sometimes it feels that the content is a bit repetitive, but in your case I look forward to every upload and this series is some of the best content I've seen in my life. Great job Vince, you're officially my favorite youtuber.
I certainly enjoy all your videos, Vince, including this one. As I fumble my way through trying to make videos myself, I also understand that there is an awful lot of work involved.
Happy to watch any content, it is what it is. Keep up the good work!
The Bosch trimmer works great! The coffee maker is one of those things where it's more economical to buy a new one. Thank you MMV! 🥳🤓
plastic weld the little pipe using zip ties as a filler material and your most unloved soldering iron. Melt a straightened paperclip cutoff into both sides to add some strength. Bodge!
...and then use jbweld and some fiberglass as reinforcement (from drywall). Better than factory.
you are doing great! Keep them coming cause I'm sure they'll be useful and they are still entertaining and educational
Vince, I think everyone watching enjoys your videos, that's why we all watch you, it doesn't matter if there is no fix in the end, it's what we learn along the way
I enjoyed the video Vince. Thank you for the content, really highly appreciated
I enjoyed it! Great work Vince! I've really enjoyed the challenge!
J.B. Weld or super glue might work for the video repair, and it might not leak. But after that I wouldn't use it for making coffee. I'd be worried about chemicals leaching into the water. I love you videos. You are so enthusiastic it's contagious. I learned to do some house repairs after watching my dad, (at 90 he doesn't do that very much anymore). I think that's why I like watching your videos. I'm a PC tech and love taking things apart. Took me a long time before I didn't have any left over screws.
Excellent, interesting as we have just bought one of those Tassimo machines to replace our old one which blew up which replaced the previous one and the one before that. Will make a note about that JB weld stuff and see how you get on with it.
Just wanna thanks vince for this december fixaton, i enjoyed it alot
Looks like we all need this distraction from daily life at this time of year, truly exceptional vince keep it up.❤
No apologies needed, love all your content!
These advent fixes have been great. Cheers Vince.
Please don't worry Vince not everything is fixable without spare parts. really enjoying all your videos, Happy Christmas.
Brilliant fix Vince nice repair and repair hack on the trimmers there’s gonna be loads I’m sure 😊
I've got one of those Bosche clippers. They are great for topiary, clipping your hedge into interesting ornamental shapes.
Good to know what to do if it jams!
Coffee is for closers, Vince.
Kidding, merry Xmas.
It's been quite the... ADVENTure... so far 🤣
Keep it up Vince, great series. And I bet you're well caffeinated for the next episode!! ☕
You videos are always interesting. I think I did watch a video of the paint drying on the Roller. I use a Tassimo for my daily cup. I believe that is a pressure relief valve. There is a huge support community for refillable pods and DIY beverages. thanks for what you do. Ho Ho Ho! JB Weld is awesome. Epoxy and time will cost more than a new valve :-)))))
23:24 - Good to see Vince's collection pile of blue LEDs and watch batteries is growing nicely!
❤️ Enjoy all your videos, Thanks for the efforts you put into them !
Awesome video series. Excellent work.
The barcode tells it what temperature and amount of water to output. I use mine with the descaling disc with a custom barcode stuck over the top (can find a breakdown of all the barcodes on google) just for a hot cup of water for making things like instant soup, tea or instant coffee. Cheaper than buying pods 😂 on the trimmers you should have replicated the issue and made it lock up. Good fixes again tho 👍
i enjoy all your videos they are a nice break from my constant job hunting and worrying about life
These videos are making the run to Christmas less boring 😂
Fred in a shed is very popular amongst CB radio and other radio users.
Greetings from Germany,
i enjoy your videos alot and i´m excited to see new uploads on your channel.
Keep on Going 🔥
Flo
Absolutely enjoying this! Many thanks! 🎉
Thank god you are back. Missed my my fix, fix🙂
Vince all your videos are so entertaining keep doing all you do
Very impressed by Bosch having a parts diagram and spares for the machine even if sadly they're not worthwhile at the cost. Ive been trying to repair a Sage (Breville) Barista Express and theres no parts diagrams and the only parts widely available are solenoids & motors. All the connectors that carry water seem to be custom and its an absolute nightmare trying to find compatible parts or to convert it over to something more widely available
Still loving this series Vince - Hopefully its not being a chore for you too much doing these all at the same time because that takes the fun out of it too! (unless its 'extra' repair videos you have done during the year and saved them all up to schedule on YT each December day?) Thanks again Vince - and thanks to your family if they have to be quiet around the house if you are busy filming lol
Vince, we love what you do regardless. Pumping out so many videos in a row is in itself a massive amount of work. Awesome! Can I just say what one of the other commenters has said, in that I think you could fix the Tassimo by getting some thin brass tube that would go outside the broken plastic tube and use epoxy to glue it over what is there. Epoxy would be water and steam proof. I'm sure there is a re-visit in it? Keep up the great work!
Hi Vince. Long time viewer. I think your fixes are awesome!! Absolutely no need to apologize for anything!! I always look forward to seeing you drop a new video!! Great job keeping up all these fixes!!!!! Love your channel!!!😊😊😊😊😊
JB Weld is such great epoxy. I've used it for so much stuff and it does have a pretty high heat tolerance. Always useful to have some to hand.
Always enjoy the videos
Sometimes you can help the JB weld to hold using thin steel wire, strong synthetic thread, tissue or anything you can imagine. It works like the reinforce bars work on concrete. In the case of tubes like that, if you can find a metal tube from a portable radio antenna or anything similar, you can sleeve the plastic part to hold the pressure and fix it externally with epoxy to hold the whole piece together. Not for money, of course, just for the sake of fixing.
Relly enjoying the fixes
There no need to sorry I still loved it and by watching all your videos it making me to get into things like this I’m leaning a lot
You know, people would jump in joy and do 3 cartwheels around the kitchen table when they buy stuff that is advertised as broken but it works when they get it :) But not Vince... He want's the broken stuff.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I don't know what kind of plastic that coffee machine part is made of, but I think I'd try melting the pieces a bit and try to bond them like that. As others say, glue might not be a good choice here, since the machine is making things you drink. It could be okay to strengthen the outside, but not the inside. Also, the pressure and heat might break the bond of the glue over time. As someone else mentioned, a food-safe tube could also be a possible fix, as long as you can tighten it. A few zip-ties might do wonders.
Loving this series :)
This series is impressive. It’s like eating an elephant, you can only do it one bite at a time.
The spares situation is always the toughest part. And it’s only getting harder because of the price of new equipment is so low. How companies can make a profit on a new unit I don’t know.
I’ve seen J-B weld being used in so many videos it must be very useful. I would have thought that using a drill bit to line up the 2 pieces would make attaching them together easier. Maybe grease the drill bit very lightly first would also be a good idea.
Well done so far Vince 👏
Great work .
I'm off to buy some JD Weld.
You can use a small piece of copper or brass tubing with an outside diameter as close as you can get to the inside diameter of the broken tube to bridge the brake in the plastic then epoxy it together. I do something similar with steel tubing when I need to weld 2 pieces of tubing end to end and have a strong joint.
Great video Vince! My only concern would be drinking coffee that had boiling water running over the epoxy or JB Weld, I am unsure if any of them would be food safe especially at higher temps. I would feel bad if you were to get sick, or maybe I am just overthinking it. Either way, great video mate!
Even when its a no fix or even a simple fix its still interesting to find out what the faults were.
I'm not gonna lie getting a mmv every day has made this Christmas very exciting for me 😂
I use automotive 3/16 steel brake pipe for repairing plastic fittings, you can also thread the pipe with a die and screw it into the broken plastic.
Hey if you can find a plastic pipe with the same OD as the ID of the broken part, you could sleeve it use the plastic weld to fix it, and that should fix the pressure issue as the pressure would be trying to push the sleeve out
Hi Vince. Most American appliance manufacturers also have exploded view diagrams with all parts available... for dishwashers, washing machines etc.
"Don't wanna get the box wet" wife be like oh yeah save the box but please continue to waterboard my kitchen Vince lol I think that bosch trimmer fix is worth the money, just think how many of these things bought for people at xmas and not used till that 30 day not our problem amazon types hide behind kicks in and boom more landfill bet that ain't in the typical ruthless efficiency german handbook that come with it, normally 300 dialects but not the right information you need, smart fix Vince!
Hi Vince JB weld will have held if you roughly rough up the area on the part it will have something to bite into also I used JB to fill a hold on engine blocks and other such parts in the past maybe a come back part two on a quick fix maybe otherwise keep the vods coming 😊😊😊
I love your videos.
ive been looking forward to watching the advent video every day, its going to be sad when this is over and have to wait for a video for an unknown amount of time lol
Yayyy bedtime treat
Enjoy the easy wins mate!
Some of us have this strange urge to try to fix anything faulty or broken rather than simply tossing it. It's not only legitimate, it's admirable😃👍❤️
Can I suggest a plastic weld on the broken pipe. Heat the end of a screwdriver with a blow torch and use a black cable tie as a welding rod.
Bosch are great for spare parts. I repaired Bosch tools for a few years, they have diagrams for everything. Normally you can order every individual part down to single nuts and bolts. Some parts can be expensive making repairs uneconomical but thats the way companies are these days!
Get a piece of brass tube same diameter as the tube where the break is, then cut about 10mm long, file some cuts for the tube sticking up, then assemble with araldite making sure the bits are butted together, ace bodge.
Hi Vince, maybe pressing fit an aluminium tube inside both sides on that bosch part could work.
no apologies necessary . looking forward to tomorrows video
I think you could solder a bit of plastic to bond it together and also to cover the hole
Quick note, thanks for the mention of the JB weld. If it was the end of the world, and you absolutely had to fix it... I would probably suggest a tiny piece of brass tubing 6-7mm long with the OD similar to the ID of the plastic tube. Then use that as a stint to add support for a massive JB weld botch job. But as you said, no way worth the effort.
Was ok Vince you did good in that one good advice to
1/8 double-ended brass stab hose adapter with J-B weld.
There is a product called Milliput putty that can set under water and is heat resistant to 130⁰C. I have used it on a kettle, hose pipe and a bath tub. It would work good on the Tassimo
Just wondering about the safety of using JB Weld to repair that part. I have no knowledge of JB Weld and its qualities but wonder if it would provide a potable repair?
Usually think of bosch as upper mid range. 1 tier below Miele and the like but good quality for a mid range price but now they seem to have a much bigger range and theres quite a quality difference as you go up the range. They do quite well in quality and reliability surveys but cheaper plastics do seem to be used in newer stuff. There's stuff thats quite flimsy feeling in my new bosch dishwasher like tablet tray/dispenser compared to my 13 year old bosch washing machine of which virtually nothing is flimsy. The shell itself is rusting a little now but no repairs have been needed in much use. Only time will tell if the dishwasher lasts as long. Over 10 years for a 2010s appliance is good in my view. Hopefully if they at least keep the parts for it should something snap it'll be easy to fix.
I would be careful using JB Weld to fix that coffee machine, if any JB Weld can come into contact with the water passing through the pipe it will leech into the water which is not something you want to be drinking.
You can buy JB Kwik Weld in the large tubes like you purchased the original formulation in, you get a much larger quantity and is cheaper than the syringe.
Very good point, thanks for telling me Adam👍👍👍
I would verify those adhesives are food safe. In this instance you're just doing a temporary fix, but for long term use I'd be concerned about leeching of bad stuff from the adhesive.
Use UV setting glue, no problem.
We enjoy just hanging out with you. While we appreciate you being candid, let us decide if we are interested!
have you considered getting a 3d printer for small plastic parts as replacements?
Well the wife was on a promise tonight but now she's a MMV widow!