














🔧 Pull with power, fix with flair — your Moen faucet’s new best friend!
The Danco 86712 Moen Cartridge Puller is a precision-engineered aluminum tool designed to remove Moen Posi-Temp tub and shower cartridges from the 1200, 1222, and 1225 series. Lightweight yet durable, it fits both brass and plastic cartridges, making DIY faucet repairs faster and more efficient while helping you save water and energy.



| ASIN | B000DZH9I8 |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | #10,801 in Tools & Home Improvement ( See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement ) #11 in Faucet Cartridges |
| Color | Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (4,197) |
| Date First Available | January 18, 2007 |
| Finish | Steel |
| Included Components | Cartridge Puller |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Item Weight | 4.6 ounces |
| Item model number | 86712 |
| Manufacturer | Danco, Inc. |
| Material | Aluminum |
| Measurement System | Metric |
| Part Number | 86712 |
| Product Dimensions | 1.4 x 5.1 x 7.1 inches |
| Size | Pack of 1 |
| Style | Puller |
| Warranty Description | Warranty |
I**R
Get this don't think twice.
I have worked on plumbing for about 50 years!! Yes I'm older but experienced and honestly when I first watched the videos and looked over the old cartridges I thought oh boy! Nothing worse than breaking stuff or leaking stuff or call the plumber expensive stuff. This tool is a must have especially for the price. It's simple to use. Steps....unscrew the screw in the handle out most of the way, rotate the indexed tabs on the tool up with the cartridge in the wall, start turning the screw into where the handle for the faucet used to go, turn the big nut on the Danco tool clockwise. The point here is to let the nut do the work on the tool insuring you the the long screw in the handle seated into the end of the cartridge where the old faucet handle went. As you turn the big nut on the tool you will find you will need channel locks or a crescent wrench and I cannot stress this enough don't be in a big hurry to pull it out of the valve body. Slow and steady and you should not break a thing. I have a 22 year old house and this is the first time I replaced the faucet cartridges!! I should have replaced them the minute they were getting hard to turn, pull and push. This tool will insure that you shouldn't break anything...slow and steady. Finally not getting this tool drops you back to raw muscle power and frankly so often if you have to pull something so hard that you're just about to pull the pipes out of the wall ( I saw a video where the guy was almost there with pulling stuff out of the wall but...the cartridge finally let go) you've got a problem. This tool insured the job was done right and nothing was broken and left in the wall that is part of the valve. If you want a nightmare of a plumbing job don't get this, break something off in the wall, and find a very expensive plumbers bill which probably will set you back $300 or more if your'e lucky!!! The tool is excellent and very robust, not a piece of junk but a solid piece of metal!!
K**T
Absolutely necessary
I was stuck trying to remove the old cartridge from our shower. This “corer” absolutely saved me! Easy to use, finished the job in no time.
A**R
Stick with name brand
Great quality , works as expected
G**D
Good quality and will likely save you a headache if you are fixing an old Moen sink/shower faucet
I was dealing with an old Moen brass shower faucet valve that needed replaced. The brass valve cartridge was held tight by corrosion in the brass faucet body and needed to come straight out cleanly. If you are replacing an old cartridge, you probably will face this. If you don't use a tool like this, you have a high risk of damaging the old faucet body or even breaking loose a pipe/fitting. That would turn a moderately simple DIY repair into something much more difficult and expensive (possibly a plumber visit, or needing to get into the wall area around a shower mixer/valve assembly). This tool is all metal, simple to operate and worth the money (even if you only need it once). It should last for multiple repairs if you have other old Moen shower or sink faucets using the 1200, 1222 or 1225 valve cartridge.
A**R
Must have to remove the 1222 series Moen valves
So, it is not that the instructions with this product were bad, but more like good in theory, but missing some important steps in practice. I am hoping this review will save you some time by sharing my process to remove a valve that had been in there for 20+ years. So here we go: NOTE: This applies to a posi-temp 1222 series valve. I cannot speak to the 1225 moentrol, but I would guess the process would be similar. 1. If you have the valve handle off, valve handle base uscrewed (phillips screw), and the plastic limiter and chrome bezel removed, then you are ready to start this process. It would also be a good idea to block your drain so you don't drop small parts down it if you haven't already done so. 2. This is so important I made it its own step. Remove the retaining clip that holds the valve in place. I used lineman pliers to grab the clip tab on the top of the valve body and pull straight up and out. 3. Take the tool and spin the hex part as close to the T-bar handle as you can. Place the tool over the brass valve shaft and screw it in where the valve handle was. 4. Spin the hex part the tool back away from the T-bar until it hits the brass body that the valve is in. 5. Take and adjustable wrench and turn it against it to begin extracting the valve. It will only be able to pull it out about 2 inches and likely it is still stuck pretty good in there. 6. Pull with moderate force on the T bar to see if the valve is loose enough to come out. (it probably won't) It is imperative that you only pull straight on the valve. Do no try to rock it back and forth or pull it at an angle. You will break it off in there, and at that point you will have to get real creative to get it out. 7. If you made it to this step, then the valve is about half way out but would come out any further. Now, as you pull moderately, begin to twist the T-bar as your pull out on it. (think corkscrew motion) You should feel it break free as you are twisting on it, but it is going to come out hard all the way. Note: The rubber on one side of mine split in two as I removed. I assume that is why it leaked in the first place. One the valve is out, be sure to check the valve body for any debris. (rubber pieces, etc and clean it out before installing the new valve. I am not going to go back through installing the new valve here, but I am going to give you a hint on the retaining clip. It will not fully seat easily, so there are two things to check. First, is the valve all the way in. The clip won't even go in if it isn't. Second, clip goes 3/4 the way in, so use a small flat blade screw driver and gently manipulate each side of the clip through the bottom of the valve body. This doesn't take much force, but rather a bit of finesse. I hope this information helps. It worked for me and my valve came out in one piece. I don't make any guarantees on this process.
W**S
The tool you NEED for the job
Had to replace two Mohen cartridges and this worked perfectly. i'd never done it before and tried to use a cheaper plastic piece that came with the replacement, but to no avail. This made quick work of pulling out the cartridge, fit perfectly, and resulted in getting our water pressure back in the showers which had slowly degraded over time as the cartridge failed. Good Luck & God Bless.
A**R
Soft metal
It worked but the teeth on the tool broke while attempting to remove the cartridge. Cheap metal?
B**B
Did a hard job easily, with one minor addition
Needed to extract a Moen 1222 cartridge that had been in place for almost 30 years, in a house with very hard water. I expected a battle getting it out, with this tool and a good crescent wrench it came right out. NOTE that after reading multiple reviews questioning the tool's durability, I took the precaution of putting a 1" ID steel washer in between the brass valve housing and the tool so the push nut would have a smooth surface to ride against and the brass wouldn't dig into the aluminum of the tool.
B**T
Very light material compared to my other puller.. but it worked well. I broke my other cartridge pulling it out with my other cartridge puller that was meant for a different cartridge so I wanted to get this one that was meant for my cartridge so I didn't break it and spend hours trying to drill out my cartridge being careful to not hit any pipe. I got the cartridge half out and broke it again with this one but that was my own fault because I started to put pressure from side to side instead of pulling straight out. . But having it half out only took a couple mins to destroy and pull out the old cartridge. So I would say this is worth buying just don't push side to side.
M**Z
Aun no lo uso se ve de buena calidad
V**O
Extracteur cartouche MOEN
M**H
I have concealed shower valves and this has helped stop the leaking shower valve .
J**N
Excellent tool to have in your toolbox for Moen faucets. Had a cartridge failing on a tub faucet tried pulling it out with pliers with no luck. Figured with tax a plumber for materials and labour would be over $100 so i watched some YouTube videos and thought with this tool I was up for the challenge. Tool made all the difference and pulled the old cartridge out no problem and probably saved myself fifty dollars minimum.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago