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One of the strainers in my kitchen sink (the side without the garbage disposal) started leaking in the putty/gasket area. After seeing a bunch of videos about how to replace it, I attempted to do the same. However, while all videos talk about removing the lock nut and having that be the hardest part, I went and got a lock nut wrench and prepared to remove the old part. To my surprise, my existing strainer doesn't have a lock nut at all, and there are no threads other than the one for the coupling nut at the very bottom. There are 3 thumb screws that appear to hold the strainer in place. The problem is that the thumb screws go through a metal ring, and while the metal ring has slots for what could be a screwdriver, that metal ring won't budge at all. After removing the thumb screws, it is possible to move the strainer, but only as far as it goes until it reaches that metal ring. See pictures below. You can even see that the metal ring isn't exactly straight, but all my attempts to get it to budge (with vinegar, with WD-40, etc.) have not been even the slightest bit successful.

Any ideas, short of trying to cut the metal ring with a hacksaw? It would be a bit difficult being how close it is to the sink.

Thank you.

Bottom of the strainer

Another view of the bottom

The top of the strainer, which is loose after removing the thumb screws

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  • It looks to me as though, with the thumb-screws loosened, you should turn the 'metal ring' such that the 'slot for possible screwdriver' lines up with the bump on the side of the strainer body - and I would then expect that the ring would simply fall off, with little to no brute force required. I'd expect that there are 2 or more of these slots and bumps which will all need to be simultaneously lined up for this to work. I fear though that your previous attempts and the encouragement to use brute force below will have jammed the ring, preventing it from turning...
    – brhans
    Commented Jul 6, 2021 at 13:03
  • Thank you, but I've already removed the thumb screws prior to posting this and the metal ring was already jammed in the crooked position by the original person who installed it. Even with the thumb screws removed, the ring would not budge or rotate. The entire strainer does rotate, as the putty and gasket seal will have then be broken, but that doesn't get the ring off any easier.
    – flipsyde98
    Commented Jul 6, 2021 at 20:30

3 Answers 3

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I finally got this strainer removed. First of all, thank you all for your suggestions. It was all somewhat correct. It had to do with lining the slots up with the notches.

After struggling with this a bit more and almost trying to pry it off as a last resort, I called my plumber. Luckily, I have a plumber who asks for pictures and then gives advice, allowing me to attempt to fix it myself. He says to only tell him to come over and fix it if I am really stuck (pun intended).

He also said that the metal ring should normally rotate, but since the installer didn't tighten all the thumb screws evenly, it led to the crooked angle and made it so that over the years, it became even harder for that metal ring to budge. Furthermore, the slots were moved so far away from the notches that it would take a bit to get it back to being lined up.

He highly recommended against using brute force and trying to pry it off, as he said since I had a stainless steel sink, it can bend the opening for the strainer and cause me more problems later.

Instead of removing the thumb screws completely, it should just be loosened so that the metal ring can move (and so that the washers won't come down and block me). He said the best approach would be to have 2 people. One person would have to hold the strainer in place from above, while I would be hitting it with a hammer from down below. He said I can either hit the ring so that it wouldn't be at a crooked angle anymore and then try to line it up, or I can just try to keep it in place while hitting the thumb screws with the hammer in attempt to cause the metal ring to rotate little by little until it lined up. Since I didn't have 2 people, I opted to just hold the flange from the bottom to try and keep the strainer from moving as I hit the thumb screw with a hammer. Slowly, it began moving. After it was lined up, it still took a bit of effort to pull on it, but it finally came off (pictures down below).

By the way, my plumber recommended just replacing the putty and the gasket. He said that from seeing the picture, I had a decent strainer and that the newer cheap ones would rust within a couple of years, whereas this one was better built and would last longer than that. I cleaned everything off and did that this evening, and everything works fine and leak-free now!

Again, thank you everyone for your responses.

Metal ring comes off Strainer without the metal ring All the parts in my pan

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  • I wouldn't re-use it. It's poorly designed and probably damaged. I added an answer so I could include a photo.
    – jay613
    Commented Aug 6, 2021 at 12:51
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Apply brute force.

I think I see what's wrong. Somebody put the metal ring on wrong in the first place. The notch in the ring that you can see at the top of your photo is supposed to mate with a bump on the strainer. Looking at the thumb screw on the right, you can barely make out such a bump next to it.

By putting it on like this and screwing it down, the ring is now pressed onto the strainer really tightly. I think your best bet is going to be to try to pry it off. Try putting the nose of a hammer between the sink and the metal ring to get some leverage. You might have to put some shims under the blunt end of the hammer for this to work.

(In general, tight-fitting metal rings can be easily removed by heating them up to make them expand, but that's likely impossible in this case due to the limited space and because all the heat will immediately flow into the strainer as well.)

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  • Its actually not a bump on the strainer, but a notch that goes into the strainer. Maybe it was supposed to match up with the notch, but that still might not make it any easier to take off. Maybe it was meant to just make it easier to pry off? I tried the hammer approach, but my hammer is a little too long for the limited space I have under the sink. I might have to try one of those smaller pry bar tools.
    – flipsyde98
    Commented Jul 6, 2021 at 9:24
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I wouldn't re-use this strainer. I've never seen one designed like this before. I think the idea is the notch you highlighted slips up over the protrusion that I highlighted:

enter image description here

then you rotate the ring so it rests on the protrusion, and tighten the thumb screws. In your case, I think, the thumb screws were over-tightened and the ring forced down over the protrusion. That's why it was so hard to remove. Once you loosened the thumb screws it should have easily rotataed and just fallen off. It is quite likely to be damaged and will not hold well any more. IF you tighten the screws enough to hold the gasket well, the ring will start riding down over the protrusions and you'll get back into this stuck-askew configuration. Replace it.

Here is a different design where the plate bearing the thumb screws is held on by the drain threads rather than by little notches. This tends to work well. enter image description here

If you think your old one is higher quality, keep the parts and if the new one does start rusting you can maybe mix and match the parts. The old basket and ring with the new thumb screws and their triangular plate.

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