You'd be better off getting an inexpensive or used sink and throwing it in there. I see people giving them away all the time after they remodel.
|
|
|
I am in the process of buying a house and the list of things to fix is endless. It is a 203k loan, so every little thing has to be documented by a contractor (had one quote $50 for installing smoke alarms).
Anyway, the main bathroom has an older (house built in 79) sink with a hole eroded right near the drain, less than a half inch in diameter. Is there a legitimate fix that would patch that hole and satisfy building code? I'd much rather be able to do a temporary repair now and come back to replacing the sink, reinstalling fixtures, and retiling the countertop at a later date. Is there a feasible way to do this?
Last edited by Atomic Teaspoon; 05-17-2011 at 11:22 AM. Reason: additional info
You'd be better off getting an inexpensive or used sink and throwing it in there. I see people giving them away all the time after they remodel.
That's great to know. I didn't know used materials could be utilized.
Here a nice sink that was thrown away. It was rusting out from below and rusted above.
![]()
Even a brand new steel sink is not expensive and would work for you just fine for as long as necessary. It's when your start getting in to cast iron and upper level fixtures that the money gets serious.
"Code" does NOT care what the sink looks like, just that it work properly. Make any kind of repair you will be happy with.
You consider that to be a bad price for someone to purchase a smoke detector, drive to your home, install the smoke detector, using tools they own and maintain, then drive home or, back to their shop again?
I wouldn't do it at that price... I'm thinking 3 - 4 times that amount before I would barely consider it!
Bookmarks