Sick of the drip, drip, drip? Here's how to replace your old tap with a shiny new mixer
By Amy Cutmore, Ideal Home
If your kitchen needs a mini makeover, why not upgrade your tap? It’s a job you can tackle yourself, and with a wide variety of taps available from as little as £40, it’s a low-cost upgrade, too. You’ll need access under your sink, and to know how to turn your water supply off and on again.
Read on to get the lowdown on how to change a tap and completely transform your sink area.
Read on to get the lowdown on how to change a tap and completely transform your sink area.
How to change a tap – the kit you’ll need
- Masking tape
- Bucket
- Towel
- Screwdriver
- Adjustable wrench
- Box spanner
- Limescale remover
- Cloth
- New mixer tap
- Plumber’s pliers
- PTFE (Plumber’s tape)
1
Check your pressure
2
Remove the old tap
Make a note
of which supply pipe is hot and
which side is cold, labelling with masking tape. Turn off your water, either with
the isolating valves, or by shutting the stopcock. Run the tap to drain any water. Spread an old towel inside the cupboard and place a bucket to catch the drips.
3
3
Disconnect the tap from the water pipes
Loosen the nut attaching the tap to the mains pipe using an adjustable wrench (you may have two supply pipes each end with a compression fitting or two shut-off valves in the pipes under the sink). In each case, loosen and disconnect the joints with the wrench.
4
4
Remove the tap
5
Fit your new tap
Assemble your new tap if necessary. The new tap will have a tube with an external screw thread at its base. Push the tube down through the hole in the sink or worktop, then
push the retaining plate and washer over the tube. Fit the nut and tighten with
the wrench or pliers.
Check the hot and cold connectors aren’t twisted. Reconnect to the supply valves or pipes. If the pipework to your old tap had a flexible hose, then fitting a new tap should be straightforward. If you have solid copper pipes, then unless your taps are the same length, you’ll need to use flexible hosing to bridge the gaps.
6
Check the hot and cold connectors aren’t twisted. Reconnect to the supply valves or pipes. If the pipework to your old tap had a flexible hose, then fitting a new tap should be straightforward. If you have solid copper pipes, then unless your taps are the same length, you’ll need to use flexible hosing to bridge the gaps.
6
Finish up
Tighten the joints, and
then turn your water supply back on.
7
7
Test your tap
8
Fix any leaks
If a compression joint (see step 3) is leaking, you might need to undo the joint and wrap some PTFE tape (plumber’s tape) around the inner compression ring.
See more at: Ideal Home
See more at: Ideal Home