| plugged pipe? maybe the washer is off the stem of the shutoff valve and plugging the valve, reducing the flow? got galvanized pipe? -- the hot one will gunk up faster with calcium and rust than the cold one.
sig: if this is a new economy, how come they still want my old-fashioned money?
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| | | Posts: 4700 | Location: North Burbs, MN | Registered: Mar 14, 2007 |  
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| Before pulling a new faucet apart shut the water off and remove the line under the faucet (not the valve) and run some water into a bucket to see if you get flow.
joecaption
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| a little fluff from the cardboard carton can be all it takes to block the flow. having been whacked full-force in the face with a little accident setting a bathroom sink, and somebody's hands flying and opening the quarter-turn shutoff on the hot water, I'm hesitant to suggest taking the cartridge out and then flushing the faucet body that way. but it could be done. warning, danger, fattening etc. department... nothing happens as you slowly open the shutoffs, and then all of a sudden, it's a freaking flood.
sig: if this is a new economy, how come they still want my old-fashioned money?
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| | | Posts: 4700 | Location: North Burbs, MN | Registered: Mar 14, 2007 |  
IP
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