How many mathematicians does it take to change a shower head?
Just one. That's what I was doing last Sunday at 3:14.I've been wanting to do this for a while (like, two years, maybe?), and of course for me the difficult part was *STORES* and *buying things*. For some reason, maybe because my husband is away for a month and I have summer-related freedom in my schedule, I finally broke down and got this baby over here ---> .
What I wanted: (a) something relatively low-flow, to conserve both water and energy, of course; (b) a "pause" button so I could easily stop the flow if I'm doing something like shaving and don't want the distraction of getting pelted with water while I'm doing so, and (c) a hose, so I can use this to help with things like rinsing the shower tub after I clean it. (When I was a kid, I used to be in charge of bathing our Irish Wolfhounds, who Did Not Want To Be Bathed. A hose was super helpful for that project, too, but I'm all out of Irish Wolfhounds, dirty or bathed, these days).
Here's the old shower head: perfectly functional, but without (b) a pause button or (c) a hose.
Changing a shower head is just as easy as changing a lightbulb -- or, in this case, as easy as changing three lightbulbs. I took the supplies hanger off of the pipe, unscrewed the old head, and then screwed on three new things: the holder onto the pipe, the hose onto the holder, and the head onto the hose.
No special tools needed; in fact, the directions specifically caution to not use a wrench. The first time I screwed the head on it leaked like crazy, but then I unscrewed it and tried again, and it worked like a charm.
All told, this project took me 20 minutes -- and that includes opening the package, bringing the wrench up from the basement, reading the directions, taking the wrench back to the basement, doing the actual change-over, photographing things, and cleaning up the box and such (the old shower head will go to Habitat Restore. )A lovely Sunday project.
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