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Thread: Impala Kitchens
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27th February 2006, 02:08 AM #16Novice
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Originally Posted by seriph1
You can buy great taps in OZ that have a warranty and carry the WATERMARK Ticks.
I am a Licensed Plumber and have recently been involved as an expert witness in a civil case where a tap failed, plug was in the sink and kitchen was flooded - Insurance company wouldn't pay up because tap was not approved, $46,000 damage included timber floor + insurance companies legal and court costs estimated to be about $8,000.
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27th February 2006, 07:45 AM #17
A bloody nightmare for the homeowners, that could've been avoided by a few simple measures I guess..... interesting that the court ruled against them when the damage was clearly done by their negligence of leaving the plug in. Which part of the tap failed?
The taps I have bought are available here - they are just oppressively expensive. eg. I paid $100US plus postage for the TWO T+S brass pre-rinse spray units. They retail here through REECE for $1,089.00 each (no extra zero added in for effect) and the exposed breach unit from the UK was 20GBP + postage - it can be bought from one distributor in Melbourne for the princely sum of $385 Plus crank arms at $105 per pair. Both sets are sold worldwide and carry a list of approvals for UK, European and US compliance - I can live with the risk that they won't comply with Australian Standards, though I doubt we have any more stringent testing than these other countries. Finally, the only locally available taps I can source, while functionally perfect are aesthetically inappropriate for our home/renovation, otherwise I would've bought locally without hesitation (the Bastow ones, available as period taps are bloody woeful) - these purchases are result of more than 3 years research into such things. I have heard of Aussie taps getting basically blown apart internally due to ridiculous water pressures around Melbourne - not sure if this is Aust-wide but it is concerning. It's like everybody MUST have 6 million Kpa delivered to their heads when in the shower!
Just one more thing - if Australian standards for sinks and tubs included the additional waste outlets that their Euro/UK/US counterparts had, you may not have had to be called to court.
You've got me wondering now how many taps sold on eBay in Australia would actually comply - few, I imagine. Potential legal minefield and one which will never go away as the cost of gaining certification would be thousands of dollars per product. We won't see it but one day there will be worldwide standards, I guess.
have fun!Steve
Kilmore (Melbourne-ish)
Australia
....catchy phrase here
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27th February 2006, 10:43 PM #18
Yeah, what a joke Australian standards are for basins. They prohibit overflows because "they waste water". Like people in other counties just leave the tap running all day? :confused: ::mad:
I have a spec built house. I have had to replace all the cheap crap indian (approved) taps with Euro units sourced from overseas for 1/4 the local price. Same goes for door hardware.
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7th March 2007, 06:49 PM #19New Member
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Haven't been here for some time BUT all taps installed in australia MUST have the WaterMark test mark to be legal, price and country of origin/manufacture is irrelevant - You can sell or buy taps and fixtures (basins, sinks, toilets and cisterns) in Australia, sometimes manufactured in countries that surprise us that they even having any plumbing at all, however such taps and fixtures often sold in local papers, markets and auction houses are NOT approved.
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7th March 2007, 06:58 PM #20New Member
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- Perth Western Australia
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7th March 2007, 07:33 PM #21
I'm glade you have revived this thread Bill, its a good read.
My two bobs worth is design your kitchen yourself.
It takes very little research to find standard heights and widths of carcases so you can use flat packs (if you wish to DIY) and it makes you think about how you wish to use the kitchen in the most ergonomic way.
IE this is where the stove goes so I will prepare food here therefore I want utensils close, this is where I will serve up so I want plates etc close, if the sink goes here I can have the dishwasher here.
Its great fun, you can't bitch about it being not what you were after, and your not being dishonest about using some other designers labour under false pretenses which is a bloody rotten thing to do.
Happy designing!
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9th March 2007, 10:15 AM #22
Here are some kitchen design guidelines to help you when designing your own kitchen.
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