Replacing Your Old Bathroom Taps with New Ones Can Really Change a Room
When replacing old taps with fresh ones the hardest part of the job is sure to be removing the old fittings. Let us first consider sink taps. Mayfair bathroom taps are very affordable and should be one of the first brands that you consider buying for your home.
You have to, naturally, cut off the cold and warm water supplies to the basin.
The easiest way of doing this could sometimes be to tie up the float arm of the ball valve supplying the cold water storage cistern so as to stop water flowing in. Then run the bathroom cold taps till water ceases to flow. Only then open up the hot taps. This may preserve the majority of the expensively heated water in the hot water storage cylinder. If you look under the basin you’ll find the tails of the taps are hooked up to the water supply pipes with little, reasonably accessible nuts, and a bigger ( regularly inaccessible ) back-nut secures the tap to the basin.
The nuts of the swivel tap connectors joining the pipes to the taps are sometimes simply undone with a wrench or spanner of the proper size. The back- nuts can be very difficult even for pro plumbers! There are special wrenches and basin or crowsfoot spanners that can help, but they will not perform miracles and ceramic basins can be simply spoiled by heavy handedness. The best plan of action is to disconnect the swivel tap connectors and to disconnect the trap from the waste outlet. These are secured by nuts and are simply undone. Then lift the basin off its brackets or hanger and place it the wrong way up on the floor. Apply some penetrating oil to the tap tails and, after permitting a couple of minutes for it to soak in, tackle the nuts with your wrench or crowsfoot spanner. You will find they’re much more accessible. Hold the tap while you do this to stop it swiveling and damaging the basin.