If you are considering upgrading your kitchen sink faucets then this guide will definitely help you. However, before starting with the work, make sure that you have new faucet assembly, basin wrench, adjustable wrenches, slip-joint pliers and scouring pad along with you.
Before you start, go at the shut-off valve under the sink and turn off the water. Open the faucet so that it could drain any excess water. Now disconnect the hot and cold water supply lines from the shutoff valves. You can use a small adjustable-wrench to do this.
Behind the faucet, you will find the coupling nuts that connect the supply tubes to the faucet. Unscrew it using a basin wrench. You will also find mounting nuts there that hold the faucet in place. You need to remove all those nuts using the same basin wrench.
As all the nuts are removed, you can easily take out your old faucet. At the time of lifting out your faucet, disconnect the sprayer hose from the assembly using adjustable wrench. Now take out that sprayer hose and remove the faucet.
Make sure that you clean the sink surface thoroughly with a scouring pad after removing the old faucet. After this, take out the old escutcheon cap and put the new one there (that has come with your new faucet).
Now you are ready to make the new connection. Bring your new sprayer hose and slip it down through the sprayer hole. Feed the sprayer hose up through the center faucet hole and connect the hose through the sprayer nipple using an adjustable wrench.
In case the hot and cold supply tubes are of different length then you can use flexible connectors to the fittings on the supply tubes. Now using wrench, hold the faucet fitting tightly and secure the connections with another wrench. Now in the central hole, insert and feed the supply lines and the connectors and then set your new faucet on place.
In order to set the faucet on its place, creep under the sink and hold the faucet in place. Put a washer and nut to the end bolts and first use your hand to tighten that nut and after that tight it with a basin wrench. After this, connect all the supply lines to the shutoff valves and turn on the water supply. Ensure that your new faucet is not leaking.
Scott Rodgers is a noted writer who has been providing ample guidance on plumbing works all over the country. His expensive knowledge has, in fact, sparked significant rise in revenue for talented plumbers across the nation, from Gainesville Plumbers to Evansville Plumbers .