Kohler doesn't provide sink templates anymore?!?!!!
10 years ago
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- 10 years ago
- 10 years ago
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Vessel sink doesn't drain
Comments (36)lisa- The overflow in a sink has one function: to handle an overflow if the water level gets too high; it has no role in relation to the drain functioning properly. Any properly installed sink drain consists of two parts: 1) the pipe from the bottom of the sink to the P-trap and then on to the sewer, and 2) the vent pipe (usually in the wall) that is connected to the drain pipe and admits air so that there is no suction effect when a large volume of water is going down the drain. If there is no vent, or if the vent gets plugged up, then the water running down the drain tends to cause a suction effect and the water drains slowly. Conversely, if a sink is properly vented, it doesn't matter whether it has an overflow or not. Does that make sense to you?...See MoreCaulk doesn't stick to stainless steel sink
Comments (55)My son-in-law said the same thing. I have 2 small blocks All Marble and Granite gave to me in case I ever needed to match the granite. That should have been a red flag. Can you recommend a granite place ? I found 2 more (for repair) and both said NO! There is a back splash and they gave me a ledge on the window sill. Can you believe I never looked under the sink before and saw the wooden blocks? I will also call my contractor since he deals with granite people. I should have had him oversee this. As I said, my girlfriend found a smaller polaris sink. I am so fed up, I am thinking, if I have to replace the granite, I will use my corian overmount sink that I still have from when I had a laminate counter top....See MoreFabricator doesn't want to guarantee sink install
Comments (25)peppermintleaf - thank you, that is good to know about the précis! Hubby and I have been back and forth about the large single bowl vs the 1 3/4. Because of a complicated layout, we have designed our kitchen with two ranges in two different work stations(we can't put them side by side without losing prep space or the prep sink). One is geared more for baking, and one is geared more for cooking. Hubby and I are often working in the kitchen at the same time, and I often am baking. The larger sink is near the cooking station, and beside the dishwasher. We realized that it is quite common for one of us to be doing the dishes while the other needs to drain boiling water or wash their hands while cooking, so we wanted the option of having an extra bowl for that purpose. The prep sink is far enough away that it would be a hassle to walk across the kitchen with a pot of boiling water. However, I usually hand wash most of my baking bowls and pans, so a large-ish single in the baking station would be very useful! So long story short, we have spent a long time considering it, but don't think a super single would be the right choice for the way we use the kitchen. Thanks for suggesting it though! Had I not been reading this forum, I don't think I would have even considered a single bowl!...See MoreTemplating is done Yay! Do I get to decide where templates go?
Comments (42)I'm sorry, but fabrication is expensive and these countertops are expensive and so I don't see how working with a customer to make sure they like the templating is "donating time." Are you saying that people spending thousands of dollars on countertops should just take it however the fabricator decides (which would likely be whatever is most convenient for him and never mind how it looks in the end or if the customer likes it)? There are several people in the trades on this board who seem to have rather dim views of their customers. I don't understand this because you make your living off of these people. I do understand that some people are more difficult than others, but that's how it goes, right? I interact with my clients every day that I'm at work. So, I do understand how some people can be, but...there are so many threads on here with photos of stuff that's really not acceptable. My Dad worked in construction. He did work for both general contractors and for individual homeowners. He took pride in his work, did a good job and wanted his customers to be happy with the work he did. He had no problem taking time to make sure these things happened and he worked REALLY hard, often in unpleasant weather, to produce a good quality finished product. I never heard him complain about anything...not the heat that he worked in over the summers, the lack of bathroom facilities on many of his jobsites, the condition his job left his hands in, etc. He never complained that his customers wanted a good job or that he had to spend time with them. He also didn't gouge people or charge more when he was busy. He didn't call any of his customers a PITA or try to charge anyone a PITA fee or anything like that. I see many tradesmen, contractors, etc., these days, who seem to have really big egos, look down on their customers, try to take advantage of customers whenever they can, who feel entitled to be paid a lot of money for a minimum amount of work (or poor quality work), who refuse to take hard jobs because they are only looking to do what's easy, and who take no pride in their finished product. I'm not saying this is anyone here, but I am saying that you often seem pretty quick to criticize the customers, who are paying a lot of money and who mostly just want a good job in exchange for their money. Overall, I've been very disappointed with most of the people I've hired to do work on my home. No, I've not hired anywhere near the cheapest guys and, yes, I've been willing to pay for someone who does quality work. You can jump to calling me a PITA, if you want, but then we could talk about how much I've paid/been willing to pay (much more per hour than my husband or I have ever earned and we make a decent living) and I have photos to show the poor quality of work these guys have tried to leave us with. We could also talk about the way some of these men have acted in my home (regarding bathroom facilities that I provided, the use of my refrigerator/icemaker, etc.) and about the shocking lack of any work ethic (sheer laziness and lack of any pride in their work, not caring about the quality of their work and trying to take advantage of us in many ways, including by trying to pass off horrible quality work as perfectly fine/a good job) some of them have displayed. We could also talk about the various lies we've been told by multiple people we've talked to about doing jobs. Thank goodness we know enough to mostly prevent ourselves from being taken advantage of... Then, we could talk about the experiences of a good friend who is a single woman and how everyone she has hired over the past 15 years (and she's paid them a LOT and has never tried to hire anyone on the cheap) has basically taken advantage of her, charging a LOT and then doing subpar work. Things have changed, and not for the better. It seems that you can't trust anyone these days. I'd NEVER pay thousands of dollars for new countertops and then not be present for both templating and installation. If someone tried to charge me for that, I would find someone else. If I couldn't find someone else, I'd put in countertops myself (tile, butcherblock or maybe cut soapstone myself--which is what a family member did and it looks beautiful) before I'd allow myself to be treated that way....See More- 10 years ago
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