Kitchen Taps

Best Selling Kitchen Taps

There are kitchen styles that might look wonderful in a kitchen but do no good at all in a bathroom. High neck Pillars or bib type taps suit kitchens. That’s what they were designed for. Bib taps are sold in pairs of hot and cold items and they’re designed for wall mounting. Pillar taps were traditionally used in kitchens because of their extra height. Other taps generally associated with kitchens include bridge sink mixers. They are mounted on two holes but are joined by a horizontal pipe, or bridge, that feeds through a single spout at its centre. They have a control for hot water and for cold water. Three tap hole mixers use a hole for each control handle and one for the spout. They can be deck mounted or wall mounted. Mixers generally, though, are installed in a single hole with two independent controls for hot and cold water or a single lever or knob. Most kitchen mixer taps are larger in size than bathroom basin ones and are suitable for heavier domestic use. Kitchen monobloc basin mixers are larger too, and so more suitable for domestic use. Their water flows through a single spout with a divided flow between hot and cold water. Many kitchen tap designs today also incorporate a pullout rinser that makes rinsing easier and more convenient.