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On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 1:23:22 PM UTC-4, trader_4 wrote:
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 12:55:14 PM UTC-4, wrote: range. Maybe a slight adjustment for seasonal cold water temperature. Because the safety regulations are the reason that valve even exists. Without the safety regulations, I wouldn't have to adjust or replace anything, I'd just turn the hot valve a little less or more to get the temperature of water I need. As for the crappy water heater - yeah, maybe it is not the best, but if I had two-handle faucets, it would be totally fine. Apparently two handle, old style shower valves are still sold: http://www.homedepot.com/p/KOHLER-Re...A-BN/100094257 So, I'm not sure it's some safety regulation is the reason you have the more popular single handle type. The single handle ones are the type most people prefer and are going into most new homes, etc. But it looks like you can have what you want. How feasible it is to change it, IDK, that depends, but it's not trivial that's for sure. I'm not sure we can state that's it's "not trivial" without knowing the situation in a given bathroom. If the shower originally had a 2 handle valve which has been replaced with an escutcheon plate and a single handle, then reverting back to 2 faucets might not be that hard at all. https://www.plumbingsupply.com/image...inch-specs.png Granted, if there is only the single hole in the existing wall, no easy access to the plumbing, etc. then things do get a bit more complicated, but I don't know that we can make the "not trivial" assertion without more information. I agree you have a valuable point though, and one that you probably wouldn't realize until it's too late. Which is if you have a tankless that can't maintain a constant temperature across the flow rate when using the shower and/or shower plus other draws at the same time, then you will have the problem you describe. If that is happening with just the shower, it definitely sounds like the tankless is under sized. What make/model is it? Also something that should help would be to reduce the flow rate at the shower head, assuming it's not already limited flow. |
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