Most of us take our sink pop-up stopper for granted—until it stops working properly. Then we get that “sinking” feeling, and nobody wants that, especially in our house’s bathroom. Fortunately, help is ...
Today most bathroom sinks have pop-up stoppers instead of the old-fashioned rubber plugs. Pop-up stoppers work well, but over time they may become clogged with hair or other debris and fall out of ...
When we were children, plugging a lavatory sink " more commonly known as a washbasin " involved placing a rubber stopper into a drain opening. The stopper was tethered to the lavatory faucet by a ...
If a bathroom sink slowly loses its water or drains while it is being used, the cause is often a maladjusted pop-up drain. This mechanism, a part of virtually all modern lavatory faucets, can also be ...
As Alure Home Improvements Chief Operating Officer Doug Cornwell points out from firsthand experience no doubt, those pop-up drains in the sink do indeed tend to get choked up—and we don’t mean ...
When we were children, plugging a lavatory sink — more commonly known as a washbasin — involved placing a rubber stopper into a drain. The stopper was tethered to the lavatory faucet by a small metal ...