How to Remove an Old Bathroom Sink
Veteran plumber Mike Lombardi shows all of the steps required to disconnect and remove an old sink.
In this video from the Fine Homebuilding archives, plumber Mike Lombardi removes the last remaining fixture in our Fine Homebuilding Project House bathroom remodel: the sink. Mike demonstrates all of the steps to disconnect and remove the old bathroom sink, including shutting off the sink water-supply valves (or main water supply, if necessary), removing hot and cold water lines using a basin wrench and a crescent wrench, disconnecting the drain trap, removing the actual sink from its wall bracket, removing the old drain nipple that enters the wall. Watch the to learn a few good plumbing tips and see an interesting fix that the original plumber used to level the old sink.
Check out the full Building Skills video series:
View Comments
Not being I master plumber I would have cut those old supply lines with side cutter or sawzall in a third the time, rather then lying on my back with a basin wrench.
I put that exact same sink in the bathroom of my new tiny house in 2005. I got it at a salvage yard. I put a new wrist lever arched neck faucet on it that I had to modify for the smaller spacing. The plumbing supply place had exact replicas of that cast iron wall bracket. Without the legs you can mount it as high as you want, too. It doesn't look dated at all as a wall hung with a new faucet. Too bad the front side got broken in the demolition.
Thanks for providing tips to remove old sink and also for the video. Now I can easily remove my bathroom sinks myself.
http://crcplumbingthousandoaks.com/products.html
I was literally JUST commenting that removal of things in the bathroom are so difficult for me and here you are making it look so easy! Now where to find a bathroom that is safe to demolish so I can try this out…
dross; he getting $115 per her lol