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My house is like 10 years old, and I have one pivot rod already snapped (not the one in picture) and replaced from Amazon (for $10 CAD). I happened to be cleaning another sink and found that this Pivot Rod will inevitably snap sometime in future. I have few questions (hope they make sense).

  1. What is the life expectancy of it normally? (I believe it also depends on flow of water)
  2. Can I use little piece of duct or electrical tape around the rusting part? (Sounds cheap I know)
  3. Why don't they simply make it of plastic, at least the pivoting part?
  4. Can I buy somewhere cheap in US/Canada? ($10+ to me is expensive for this small piece)

Rusting Pivot Rod

isherwood
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programmerboy
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    Is your drain popup made of sharp metal? That's not something I've seen before across many bathroom sinks. Does your home or bathroom have extraordinary vibration? It looks like this was ground away. – isherwood Oct 12 '22 at 14:49
  • @isherwood popup is made of simple plastic. I do have laundry room next to it and I do feel vibration across when washer is spinner. – programmerboy Oct 12 '22 at 15:09
  • Well that's just bizarre. Plastic wouldn't do that, and rust will be spread more. – isherwood Oct 12 '22 at 15:10
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    There's a slight chance it's a tough enough plastic and a soft enough metal, but agreed, this is very strange. – KMJ Oct 12 '22 at 22:34
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  • You just found out. 2) No. 3) Even worse (but yes, sort of ) 4) Off-topic. - Anyone with a bunch of points that's never seen this (not even once? I lost count. These fckn things, man) ... probably shouldn't have that many points ;)
  • – Mazura Oct 14 '22 at 05:09
  • Is this a problem with cathode/anodic corrosion? Are there dissimilar metals connected in the chain of parts? – D Duck Oct 14 '22 at 18:51
  • Builder-grade hardware. Exact water chemistry. And use of corrosive chemicals didn't help. I've got two sinks that suffered exactly this failure, though both are more than 10 years old, and my solution has been to go back to traditional rubber stoppers; cheaper and less hassle than repairing the linkage. (Actually, for one sink I jettisoned that mechanism entirely when I installed a new tap.) – keshlam Feb 05 '23 at 20:20