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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't
necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? TIA Keith |
#2
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Keith Dunbar wrote:
We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? TIA Keith stainless steel sinks are littering every skip in town, and can be had for under £20 in most sheds. two hole mixers are a LOT more stable than monoblocs. |
#3
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On 7 Jul, 08:43, "Keith Dunbar" wrote:
We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? TIA Keith Try freecycle for another sink. I recently gave one away by that route. Two hole mixer taps are only about £20 in the sheds. If your sink is that old, the tap holes may not take a mono tap. Mine didn't, I had to enlarge them. By the time you've done that and blanked off the unused hole, you may as well get a cheap two hole mixer. John |
#4
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On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 07:43:04 +0000, Keith Dunbar wrote:
We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? You'll need to enlarge the hole to take a monobloc mixer. The ideal tool to use for this is a sheet metal punch: IKEA do them for about £10 since the s/s sinks they sell come without holes so you hav eto make your own. If you ask around maybe you'll find someone who's already bought one and can lend you theirs. You can buy chromed blanking plugs from Toolstation (IIRC) and no doubt other outlets if you can't improvide something satisfactory. -- John Stumbles Xenophobia? - sounds a bit foreign to me. |
#5
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In article ,
Keith Dunbar wrote: We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? Why is a two hole fitting 'obsolete'? And so what anyway - so is the sink, according to yourself. Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. No problems finding nice looking ones either - or at least last time I checked. Be aware too that one hole types are designed for high pressure water. If your hot comes from a storage system they will reduce the flow considerably. -- *Many people quit looking for work when they find a job * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#6
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On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 08:56:54 GMT, John Stumbles wrote:
You'll need to enlarge the hole to take a monobloc mixer. The ideal tool to use for this is a sheet metal punch: IKEA do them for about £10 since the s/s sinks they sell come without holes so you hav eto make your own. Ooo, that is a usefull snippet. I *hate* the sink tops that the sheds sell with two monoblock a tap holes to save stocking LH or RH versions. A blanking plate not only looks ugly but is alomost bound to leak at some point. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
#7
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith Dunbar wrote: We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? Why is a two hole fitting 'obsolete'? And so what anyway - so is the sink, according to yourself. Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. No problems finding nice looking ones either - or at least last time I checked. Be aware too that one hole types are designed for high pressure water. If your hot comes from a storage system they will reduce the flow considerably. I didn't want to buy a new two hole mixer (not cheap) and find I couldn't get (or would have only a very limited choice of) a two hole sink unit when I wanted/needed to replace the old one. I take your point about reduced flow - that's useful to know. And also the previous point made about stability. I guess when we can eventually afford to renovate the kitchen I probably wouldn't go down the stainless steel route anyway, now I think about it. Can anyone recommend a good online source of two hole mixer taps please? Keith |
#8
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On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 10:47:30 +0000, Keith Dunbar wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith Dunbar wrote: We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? Why is a two hole fitting 'obsolete'? And so what anyway - so is the sink, according to yourself. Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. No problems finding nice looking ones either - or at least last time I checked. Be aware too that one hole types are designed for high pressure water. If your hot comes from a storage system they will reduce the flow considerably. I didn't want to buy a new two hole mixer (not cheap) and find I couldn't get (or would have only a very limited choice of) a two hole sink unit when I wanted/needed to replace the old one. I take your point about reduced flow - that's useful to know. And also the previous point made about stability. I guess when we can eventually afford to renovate the kitchen I probably wouldn't go down the stainless steel route anyway, now I think about it. Can anyone recommend a good online source of two hole mixer taps please? Keith It depends on what you mean by 'expensive' the basic two hole kitchen mixer tap is £21 from screwfix. -- Ed Sirett - Property maintainer and registered gas fitter. The FAQ for uk.diy is at http://www.diyfaq.org.uk Gas fitting FAQ http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/GasFitting.html Sealed CH FAQ http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/SealedCH.html Choosing a Boiler FAQ http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/BoilerChoice.html Gas Fitting Standards Docs he http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/GasFittingStandards |
#9
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In article om,
"Dave Liquorice" writes: On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 08:56:54 GMT, John Stumbles wrote: You'll need to enlarge the hole to take a monobloc mixer. The ideal tool to use for this is a sheet metal punch: IKEA do them for about £10 since the s/s sinks they sell come without holes so you hav eto make your own. Ooo, that is a usefull snippet. I *hate* the sink tops that the sheds sell with two monoblock a tap holes to save stocking LH or RH versions. A blanking plate not only looks ugly but is alomost bound to leak at some point. I mounted [an IKEA] sink as far forward as I could, and drilled the tap hole in the worktop behind the sink. Much prefer this to drilling the hole in the sink itself; being fixed to the worktop, the tap is rock solid and doesn't wobble around at all. Makes the sink slightly easier to clean too. Somewhere, I have an IKEA metal punch for making the tap hole, still sealed in it's packaging. -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#10
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![]() "Ed Sirett" wrote in message ... On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 10:47:30 +0000, Keith Dunbar wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith Dunbar wrote: We have an old stainless steel sink which we can't afford to/don't necessarily want to replace at present. Trouble is, it has two holes for taps rather than just one. The existing two-hole mixer tap is very tatty, not really high enough, and needs replacing. I don't want to fork out on a new, but effectively obsolete twohole mixer. If I get a onehole mixer can I buy a nice blanking plate for one of the tap holes? If so, where? Why is a two hole fitting 'obsolete'? And so what anyway - so is the sink, according to yourself. Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. No problems finding nice looking ones either - or at least last time I checked. Be aware too that one hole types are designed for high pressure water. If your hot comes from a storage system they will reduce the flow considerably. I didn't want to buy a new two hole mixer (not cheap) and find I couldn't get (or would have only a very limited choice of) a two hole sink unit when I wanted/needed to replace the old one. I take your point about reduced flow - that's useful to know. And also the previous point made about stability. I guess when we can eventually afford to renovate the kitchen I probably wouldn't go down the stainless steel route anyway, now I think about it. Can anyone recommend a good online source of two hole mixer taps please? Keith It depends on what you mean by 'expensive' the basic two hole kitchen mixer tap is £21 from screwfix. I didn't realise they were so cheap - I must have missed that page when I was searching! I was hoping to get something with a bit more height though - and they do come rather more expensive, but not as expensive as I thought. Keith Keith |
#11
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On Sat, 07 Jul 2007 10:24:37 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. They can still wobble around on bacofoil sink units. Copper rather than flexible pipe tails helps, though it strains the tap connectors. -- John Stumbles What do you mean, talking about it isn't oral sex? |
#12
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In article ,
John Stumbles wrote: Two hole fittings are my preference - they are much more rigid in stainless steel. They can still wobble around on bacofoil sink units. Copper rather than flexible pipe tails helps, though it strains the tap connectors. Surely most twin hole fittings have 1/2 in connectors? Those coupled to well supported pipe give a *very* rigid mounting. That's the problem with mono block types - the tiny pipes used give no support. -- *A woman drove me to drink and I didn't have the decency to thank her Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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