Customer
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2025
Exactly what we needed to remove water filter
CJ
Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2025
The last water filter wrench you need. We have struggled for years with the plastic wrenches that come with the water filter. This is so easy to use and works great. It is well worth it. I hesitated over the price, but glad I bought it.
Ethan
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2025
This wrench is great. I used to use a rubber strap wrench to loosen my water filter canister, but it broke. This one will definitely never break.
Rod
Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2025
This wrench worked perfectly. I have two other wrenches that didnt fit and it was hard to find a wrench that I needed, especially when I didnt know the manufactures name of the filter sump (cylinder). And it was so helpful that the manufacture provided the specific dimensions of the wrench (picture). You would think that as many water companies out there it would be easy to get the wrench you need. No it is very difficult. I took a gamble on the specific dimensions the company provided and I was ready to return it if it didnt work.Great product. Fit and worked the first time. Thank you. Made in USA, metal, and the name is: SUPER WRENCH.
MidMichMan
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025
This should be included in the box with a new whole house filter. All metal with a long handle means more torque to loosen and remove the filter housing. The supplied plastic wrench is useless/junk. Remember to measure the plastic wrench you have and use those measurements to order the metal one you need. These do come in different sizes. Very rigid. Only “hand tighten” the filter housing when putting it back on. Don’t use this wrench to over tighten the filter housing. Bad things could happen.
Joshua
Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2025
Works great and well made.
Liliana
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2025
Very strong and does the job
Denise H.
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2024
Finally got the whole house water filter put in when i had the plumbing redone. They said to change the filter asap bc all the updates would put icky stuff in the line..they were right. The filter cartridge started looking funky pretty much within a day or two and more brownish afterwards. I had a set of replacement filters but wasn't sure how to swap them in. Thank you YT for the directions. I ordered strap wrenches but when they came, realized i was too weak with my girl-strength, or was doing something wrong. After watching more YT vids, i realized i needed to shut off the whole house water, and let the faucet drain the remainder.Now the math part...Measure around your housing, and divide by pi to get the circumference. This is the size wrench you need to fit the housing. I needed Google for the 16th part of the fraction..i'm better with metric but everything is stupidly complicated english-system. Once i got my correct size, this was the clear winner in the wench category.There are little nubbins that fit the extruded nubbins on the filter sump. And the handle of the wrench tells you which way to turn in case you panic or forget(not gonna judge bc been there myself). The wrench is nice metal with rubber protector on the handle. The wrench that comes with water filters usually is plastic and junky, and often break--i was terrified id start this project, the wrench would break, and i'd be stuck with a housing half on/off, requiring me to call a plumber...So to keep me precarious sanity, i opted to buy this nice, sturdy tool.I shut off my whole house valve, opened a faucet and let it run until just a drip was coming through, then i put a bucket under the sump and carefully unscrewed. Water comes out..as you loosen, so have towels handy. The housing came totally loose with one last turn, and the housing and filter kinda popped off forcefully. I was expecting it (thank you YT), so i didn't drop either one. More water kinda sloshes down and you can dispose of the filter on the garbage(i kept a plastic bag nearby do shove the dirty gross filter in so it wouldn't drip everywhere, and put it in the garbage).Just clean out your sump(i used distilled water sloshed around). I dried it with a paper towel just to make sure i got all the crud and sediment out. Then i used "food grade plumbers silicone" to lube up the rubber o-ring in the housing. Make absolutely certain you use "food grade"!!! That o-ring will be on contact with your drinking water..you really don't want industrial silicone in your water--yuck!!!Shove the replacement cartridge in the spindle in the sump, and shove the whole lot onto the top. Gently align the threads and start to twist/tighten the sump back on. When you've hand-tightened as much as you can, use this wrench to give it an extra bit of a tighten so it's snugly on. Very slowly. start to turn on your shut off valve, allowing water t flow and slowly fill the water filter. Watch for leaks. If none, slowly turn on to full-open. Your water lines may make noise as they refill--it's ok. I turned on a faucet while doing all this so it could release trapped air and bring in the water.Job done..no leaks, no funky water, and i didn't panic or cry! This wrench made the whole process a ton easier and made me feel more reassured than a cheapo plastic one. It literally takes longer for your faucet to finish dripping than it does to complete the entire filter change out.Very pleased with the quality of this wrench. Definitely a tool i will be using frequently when changing water filters. Makes the job much easier and faster.