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Your cart is empty.Simplify your plumbing projects with the Eastman fridge ice maker outlet box. Built for long-lasting reliability, this ice maker hookup box features a quarter turn brass valve and comes with a support bracket and a face plate cover. This ice maker outlet box is UPC approved, lead free compliant, and features working temperature of 34 degrees F to 180 degrees F, and a working pressure of 125 PSI.
Betsyboat
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2025
I tend to buy the Eastman boxes and braided hoses and so far I haven't regretted it they've been very reliable
Linda
Reviewed in the United States on August 12, 2024
this is just what I needed for refrigerator water lines.
Bonq
Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2024
I ordered this for a water line to the refrigerator in a basement I was finishing for my own home. It was super easy to install and works nicely for the water line to the fridge.
BLD
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2024
I had an existing water outlet, but no box. Had to modify this a little to work, but it did and looks great. Far more finished. This is meant to be installed behind the drywall to sit flush, so you may have to notch existing drywall to make it look right.
Deanne Hobbs
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2024
Good quality, great fit and easy installation to replace a 30-year-old box when putting in a new refrigerator.
Robert Khouri
Reviewed in Canada on September 24, 2022
Received it with a slight crack in one of the inside corners. I still installed it. I didn't notify anyone or give them an opportunity to rectify it. So I'm just giving the seller the benefit of the doubt and giving it a good rating regardless. Product works as it should.
Josh Hulbert
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2022
I have a small wet bar in my home office with a standalone ice maker. For a while now it has been connected to a sink in an adjoining room with a long braided stainless hose, but this is really not the right way to have this installed through concealed areas. We are in the process of remodeling the adjoining room and it was a perfect time to "T" off the pex and run a line for this.I was able to find push to connect ice maker boxes and even one Pex A (expansion) box but was not having luck with Pex B (crimp) locally. Amazon had this available for next day delivery and that worked out great.One thing I noticed in other reviews.. pay attention to what type of Pex connections you need to make. If you are expanding Pex (ie, Pex A) this is NOT what you want. This is for Pex B which uses rings on the outside of the Pex tubing which are then crimped/compressed to make the connection. Pex B will slide over the barb connection easily but without extra play and that is what you want.
Gerardo C.
Reviewed in Mexico on December 7, 2022
Fuerte y resistente
Keegancarter
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2022
Installed with expansion pex, I had to retro fit into an already closed up wall but was able to nip out enough sheetrock to skirt this into the hole and get it onto a stud where the cover hides the extra dry wall I had to remove.I will say the barb is a little tight so make sure to expand the PEX enough to get it all the way on!Valve works so bit much more I can say.
Dave
Reviewed in Canada on July 1, 2021
Flash shipping πThis product of arrived just as the description said.Easy install just what I need it for my new fridge setup.Lots of places was sold out in town.You can always count on Amazon.
Charles
Reviewed in Canada on September 9, 2020
I used this ice maker outlet box in an old-work application behind my refrigerator, just like Tom from the US showed in his review. I forgot to take a picture before I put it in the wall, but the modifications were just screwing some small pieces of wood behind the mounting tabs on each side. The tricky bit is getting the box through the hole in the drywall: you need to take the valve off, tilt the box and slide it in sideways, then slide the box up the wall cavity to put the valve on and make the pex connection before fastening it to the drywall with a few drywall screws into the wood. Make sure you centre it between studs so you have room to manoeuvre it.Quality-wise, it's decent. In your hands the box feels somewhat flimsy, but once it's installed it feels solid. Make sure you fasten it on both sides. The valve is solid brass and looks to be high quality to my uneducated eyes.Three minor niggles:1. The valve handle is pretty stiff.2. The faceplate ratchets are too coarse, making it impossible to get it perfectly tight against the drywall if the ratchet doesn't line up.3. The Eastman brand name is stamped into the front of the faceplate in large letters.(But 2 and 3 don't really matter because it's behind the refrigerator where it won't be seen often.)I have not connected the other end of the 1/2" pex tubing to the water supply yet, so can't comment on whether or not it leaks, etc.
Edwin
Reviewed in Canada on September 23, 2019
Pex fitting with a 1/4β compression tube, installation tabs and a nice trim piece. Easy to install and the trim piece hides the drywall cut for a professional finish. Cheaper than big box stores and works really well. Highly recommend
Joseph Malone
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2019
Next time I am going with metal. I did not follow directions and sweated copper pipe causing the plastic to melt and deform. You either use the pex version or are an expert sweater of pipes. I did everything cheap and myself because I live on the west coast and most homes have one story with gross crawl space.My options were tap into the water from either the crawl space, which would be just using the regular screw type kits. I was worried about leaks and moisture rotting the insulation and the messy installation so said no to that. The other option was use to tap kit and go through a wall from the garage water heater supply to the kitchen. Since that meant going through a wall I decided to just sweat the pipe.What I did was rip out the wall using a saw to cut a 4" section. Then I disconnected the cold water union to the water heater using a propane torch to melt the solder. I then soldered a tee onto the supply pipe, replacing the elbow that had been there. I connected pipe to run vertically up into the attic, then across to the kitchen wall. I used a hole saw from a door installation kit to cut a 3/4 hole for the pipe through the ceiling joist after the 1/2" hole I drilled was too tight.After drilling my hole I stuffed 1/2" copper pipe in there and began making the connections of elbows and pipe. This was easy. The hard part was soldering the female 3/4" to 1/2" tee onto the water supply as it was in the wall and I had removed a small portion. The supply pipe was strapped to studs and using the torch in a wall is difficult not to burn things. I took the curved metal cover of the water heater and used it as a blast shield. If fit inside the wall where I needed it to and resisted the heat from the torch. Other things I tried before using the cover got to hot or melted.After sweating everything including the Eastman valve I flushed the system before hooking up my refrigerator. Flushing the system removed dust and debris that accumlated during the process. There was copper filings from sawing the pipe, wood splinters/drywall from poking it into place, and some insulation from the attic. I made the pipe very dirty but it was clean after I flushed it.I left the wall unclosed for a day to make sure that the pipes did not leak and my connections were tight before closing up the wall. Unit works good but it is a little tricky soldering it without the copper pipe itself getting so hot it deforms the plastic collar. I do not know how that is supposed to be done.
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