Terms for specific kind of water taps
There are two types of taps in my house, and both of them are suitable for cold, hot or mixed water.
The difference is one kind has ONE knob and the other kind has TWO.
The one-knob tap (for kitchen) controls hot and cold water together. When the knob is rotated to the left, hot water flows out, meanwhile right means cold water, and center means mixed water.
The two-knob tap (for bathroom) controls hot and cold water separately. One is for hot water and the other is for cold water.
OK, so are there two specific terms or phrases for two kinds of taps?
Thanks a lot.
single-word-requests terminology
|
show 3 more comments
There are two types of taps in my house, and both of them are suitable for cold, hot or mixed water.
The difference is one kind has ONE knob and the other kind has TWO.
The one-knob tap (for kitchen) controls hot and cold water together. When the knob is rotated to the left, hot water flows out, meanwhile right means cold water, and center means mixed water.
The two-knob tap (for bathroom) controls hot and cold water separately. One is for hot water and the other is for cold water.
OK, so are there two specific terms or phrases for two kinds of taps?
Thanks a lot.
single-word-requests terminology
1
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
4
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29
|
show 3 more comments
There are two types of taps in my house, and both of them are suitable for cold, hot or mixed water.
The difference is one kind has ONE knob and the other kind has TWO.
The one-knob tap (for kitchen) controls hot and cold water together. When the knob is rotated to the left, hot water flows out, meanwhile right means cold water, and center means mixed water.
The two-knob tap (for bathroom) controls hot and cold water separately. One is for hot water and the other is for cold water.
OK, so are there two specific terms or phrases for two kinds of taps?
Thanks a lot.
single-word-requests terminology
There are two types of taps in my house, and both of them are suitable for cold, hot or mixed water.
The difference is one kind has ONE knob and the other kind has TWO.
The one-knob tap (for kitchen) controls hot and cold water together. When the knob is rotated to the left, hot water flows out, meanwhile right means cold water, and center means mixed water.
The two-knob tap (for bathroom) controls hot and cold water separately. One is for hot water and the other is for cold water.
OK, so are there two specific terms or phrases for two kinds of taps?
Thanks a lot.
single-word-requests terminology
single-word-requests terminology
asked Aug 20 '16 at 3:12
Keyu Gan
1114
1114
1
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
4
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29
|
show 3 more comments
1
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
4
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29
1
1
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
4
4
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29
|
show 3 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Single-handled and double-handled (or one- and two-handled) are the terms you'd look for while buying a faucet, and also refer to faucets with knobs. This is likely what the average customer would search for, but there are more technical terms that exist.
"Single Hole Kitchen faucet" is another term for single-handled faucets, according to here.
One specific type of two-handled faucet is the compression faucet:
Compression faucets have two separate handles. When the handle is turned, it raises or lowers a washer or seal that closes against a valve seat at the base of the stem to restrict water flow through the faucet body when you turn the handle off.
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
add a comment |
The most common terms for one-knob tap and two-knob tab are single handled faucet and double handle faucet. Some people might also call single or double hole; but, that denotes different thing. A faucet with single hole can have double handle or knobs. You seem to be interested about tabs or faucets. I found Faucetsreviewed helpful. Have a look. Thank you.
New contributor
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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Single-handled and double-handled (or one- and two-handled) are the terms you'd look for while buying a faucet, and also refer to faucets with knobs. This is likely what the average customer would search for, but there are more technical terms that exist.
"Single Hole Kitchen faucet" is another term for single-handled faucets, according to here.
One specific type of two-handled faucet is the compression faucet:
Compression faucets have two separate handles. When the handle is turned, it raises or lowers a washer or seal that closes against a valve seat at the base of the stem to restrict water flow through the faucet body when you turn the handle off.
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
add a comment |
Single-handled and double-handled (or one- and two-handled) are the terms you'd look for while buying a faucet, and also refer to faucets with knobs. This is likely what the average customer would search for, but there are more technical terms that exist.
"Single Hole Kitchen faucet" is another term for single-handled faucets, according to here.
One specific type of two-handled faucet is the compression faucet:
Compression faucets have two separate handles. When the handle is turned, it raises or lowers a washer or seal that closes against a valve seat at the base of the stem to restrict water flow through the faucet body when you turn the handle off.
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
add a comment |
Single-handled and double-handled (or one- and two-handled) are the terms you'd look for while buying a faucet, and also refer to faucets with knobs. This is likely what the average customer would search for, but there are more technical terms that exist.
"Single Hole Kitchen faucet" is another term for single-handled faucets, according to here.
One specific type of two-handled faucet is the compression faucet:
Compression faucets have two separate handles. When the handle is turned, it raises or lowers a washer or seal that closes against a valve seat at the base of the stem to restrict water flow through the faucet body when you turn the handle off.
Single-handled and double-handled (or one- and two-handled) are the terms you'd look for while buying a faucet, and also refer to faucets with knobs. This is likely what the average customer would search for, but there are more technical terms that exist.
"Single Hole Kitchen faucet" is another term for single-handled faucets, according to here.
One specific type of two-handled faucet is the compression faucet:
Compression faucets have two separate handles. When the handle is turned, it raises or lowers a washer or seal that closes against a valve seat at the base of the stem to restrict water flow through the faucet body when you turn the handle off.
answered Sep 2 '16 at 21:29
Laurel
31.3k660111
31.3k660111
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
add a comment |
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
1
1
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
This may be the US term, but the terminology may differ in the UK, where the word faucet is not used.
– choster
Sep 2 '16 at 22:00
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
@choster From what I saw, the only difference is that "tap" is used instead of "faucet". For example: ux.stackexchange.com/questions/60818
– Laurel
Sep 2 '16 at 22:09
1
1
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
The "compression faucet", also known as a "globe valve", is the standard "old-fashioned" faucet, the same as is used in a "sill cock" or some other stand-alone water valve in traditional (US) plumbing. Ignoring "gate valve", which is only used for main water cutoff purposes, the other (more modern) scheme is some variation of the "ball valve", where a ball, cylinder, or plate slides against some sort of manifold containing ports that let water through when hole in the sliding piece is oriented with a port. Pretty much all single-handle faucets use some sort of slider mechanism.
– Hot Licks
Sep 3 '16 at 1:44
add a comment |
The most common terms for one-knob tap and two-knob tab are single handled faucet and double handle faucet. Some people might also call single or double hole; but, that denotes different thing. A faucet with single hole can have double handle or knobs. You seem to be interested about tabs or faucets. I found Faucetsreviewed helpful. Have a look. Thank you.
New contributor
add a comment |
The most common terms for one-knob tap and two-knob tab are single handled faucet and double handle faucet. Some people might also call single or double hole; but, that denotes different thing. A faucet with single hole can have double handle or knobs. You seem to be interested about tabs or faucets. I found Faucetsreviewed helpful. Have a look. Thank you.
New contributor
add a comment |
The most common terms for one-knob tap and two-knob tab are single handled faucet and double handle faucet. Some people might also call single or double hole; but, that denotes different thing. A faucet with single hole can have double handle or knobs. You seem to be interested about tabs or faucets. I found Faucetsreviewed helpful. Have a look. Thank you.
New contributor
The most common terms for one-knob tap and two-knob tab are single handled faucet and double handle faucet. Some people might also call single or double hole; but, that denotes different thing. A faucet with single hole can have double handle or knobs. You seem to be interested about tabs or faucets. I found Faucetsreviewed helpful. Have a look. Thank you.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 17 mins ago
Thomas Bailey
11
11
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Uh, "one-handle faucet" and "two-handle faucet".
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:13
(Or "single-handle faucet".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '16 at 3:17
4
According to build.com.au/types-and-styles-taps and bathrooms.interiordezine.com/fixtures/types-of-faucets , it sounds like both are "mixer taps" (i.e. there's only one spout for the mixed hot and cold water, instead of two separate spouts). The dual-knob type might be known as a "crosshead tap", "spoked tap", or "knob tap" (depending on what shape it is) and the single-lift type might be known as a "lever tap". Like any specialized field, I'm sure there's much, much more terminology that I'm not familiar with!
– Nick Weinberg
Aug 20 '16 at 5:16
@NickWeinberg - Aside from "mixer", I've never heard any of those terms in the US, and I doubt that many plumbers have either. homedepot.com/p/…-PIPHorizontal1_rr--206786189--100626527--N
– Hot Licks
Aug 21 '16 at 0:58
Presumably, what you describe as a one knob tap, as well as its knob controlling the temperature, requires another knob to control the flow?
– WS2
Sep 2 '16 at 22:29