All types of showers can function with a bronze shower faucet. Just make sure that when installing the faucet, that you caulk all joints properly to prevent leakage.
form_title= Shower Faucet form_header= Install the shower faucet you want in your bathroom! Do you have a working faucet in your bathroom?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure What type of faucet do you want installed?*= _ [50] Do you want the shower faucet to include a massager?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure
Claw-foot showers have a bathtub with a raised faucet head. The curtains that cover the person taking a shower can go around the entire bathtub and can fully rotate.
Not really. What is he installing? What are you trying to say? A plumber can install showers and faucets. He can install a faucet in a shower. He can install any plumbing fixture. Also it should be is this sentence written correctly.
Yes
Water needs to be shut off to the faucet. The wall will have to have an access hole cut into it, unless there is on the back side of the shower (some showers in older homes may have an access door on the back side of the wall if it backs into a closet or has been repaired before.) Depending on the type, the faucet will either be soldered or glued to the pipes, the faucet will need to be cut loose, and then the new one can be installed. Now the wall can be repaired and the job is done.
yes
No, shower doors are meant for showers, there is no kind of lock for security purposes, and is easy to break in, they are just not made to function for that purpose.
YES
Proably the faucet has a worn out washer, replacing the washer should fix the problem.
If you mean the type of arrangement in a gym, boarding school, prison or army facility where people of the same gender shower together (though each under their own shower fitting) then you might refer to it as a shower room, communal showers or perhaps ablution block or shower block- or simply' the showers' as in the phrase 'ok boys, hit the showers'. Individual showers could be referred to as 'shower cubicles' or 'private showers.'
The present tense of "shower" is "showers."
Walk-in showers have no more germs in them than do regular showers. If you clean your walk-in shower as frequently as you would a regular shower, then you will not need to worry about germs.