November 16th, 2009
It is easy to replace a kitchen faucet yourself without a plumber?
I would appreciate any tips to keep in mind while doing it? Thanks.
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Filed under: Refurbish Property











































Most important tip turn the water off first! Read all the directions before you start it’s pretty easy.
Taking an old one off might be the hardest part. First turn off the water, if you have valves that turn off just the sink water it’s better
Next take the hoses / pipes loose from the knobs, there should be only two, one hot one cold
Take the old faucet with you to make sure the new one will fit the sink
Put the new one in, replace the hoses / pipes to the correct knobs ( there will be rubber gaskets to replace to help keep them from leaking )
Turn on the water
should be done
It isn’t too bad. Make sure the water is off. Open all faucets to drain all water out. Have a drip pan ready and towels for the water that spills. Make sure connections have a nut on them (not hard soldered). If not soldered, loosen the nuts on the pipes. then loosen the nuts holding the faucet under the sink. Pull it out and put new one in. Use Teflon tape or pipe dope on threads if fitting is not flared.
It sounds harder than it is.
Without seeing it, all I can say is if the plumbing is modern then it shouldn’t be too difficult, however, why would you want to change it if it is. Unless you have a friend who has done some plumbing to show you, better to get a plumber.
For hot and cold water get basin wench from hardware loosen supply lines then there you are done deal.
For hot and hook up supply lines then there you are.
For hot and hook up supply lines then there you are done deal.
If you’re any kind of a DIY with the right tools, it’s not. Just make
sure to turn the water off underneath the sink so if you screw
something up, you won’t flood your house. Your new faucet
should have basic instructions on how to take out the old one
and install the new one. Good luck.
You’ll need one special tool.
A faucets wrench to reach under the cabinet to remove the nuts and replace. It’s a long handle with a swivel half moon shape grip. Can’t be done with any regular wrenches or pliers.
A long extension on a ratchet wrench and socket may work.
You’ll need to remove the faucets and match the configuration with the new ones.