Not only is a dripping tap annoying, it can discolour your sink and waste buckets of water every day. Silence your faucet with the below tips.
June 30, 2015
Not only is a dripping tap annoying, it can discolour your sink and waste buckets of water every day. Silence your faucet with the below tips.
The procedure to change a washer or cartridge depends on the type of faucet design. In traditional designs, turning the head of the faucet turns a spindle, which presses a rubber washer against the bottom, or seat, of the tap to control water flow. More modern faucets switch the water from off to on with just a quarter-turn. They use ceramic plates mounted in a cartridge to control the flow.
Time needed: 10 minutes (plus time to go out and buy a replacement washer or cartidge).
Tools needed: cross-head and flat-head screwdrivers, adjustable wrench, cloth, and a replacement washer or ceramic cartridge.
If your faucet still drips from the spout after you've changed the washer, it's likely that the valve seat — the part that the washer pushes against — may be worn. You can buy an inexpensive tool that grinds away a little of the metal to form a new, flat seat or use a nylon liner to provide a new valve seat. Both are available from your local plumbing supplier.
You may be staying with friends or at a hotel where you can't silence the dripping faucet with a wrench.
Wrap a piece of string (or cotton or dental floss) around the tap so that it trails into the sink or bathtub. Position it so the drips run silently down the string and drain away.
Turn off the service valve beneath the basin, if you can get to it.
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