Shower Heads
Latest news on shower heads.
I personally believed that the only route to a good shower
was a large shower head with a flow rate greatly exceeding 20 litres/minute.
Wasteful and not very friendly to the environment but non the less I believed
this to be true. I had tried water saving shower heads but didn't get on with
them.
This April looking for a break from bathrooms at a large
trade fair I stumbled upon a shower head that not only claimed various
filtering aspects but also water saving properties.
The holes in the head were triangular and tiny. There is no
way I believed it would work but purchased one anyway and brought it home. The
results were spectacular and hence the birth of Purastream. Thus far all the
samples I have provided by way of market research have generated nothing but
positive results. Try it and see for yourself.
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What information can I possibly give that may enable you to
make the correct choice when choosing a shower head.
They are constructed mainly from 3 materials namely brass,
plastics and in some cases stainless steel. Brass tends to be either cast or
spun. Spun brass is thin plate type material, cast is heavier and thicker.
Plastics are molded and stainless steel normally spun.
There are possibly 3 main functions available with a shower
head.
1). Standard type consisting of water outlet nozzles either
rub clean or fixed.
2). A massage or pulsing spray.
3). A drench aerated spray.
There is also the combination of all these 3 with
manufactures referring to 5 functions and above but they are all based on the
main three.
Typically heads that have massaging or drench aerated
functions will not operate successfully under low pressure conditions.
Brass. Typically they are of the watering can type head. The high
quality units are cast brass and come in various sizes. If you take note of the
weight of the item this will give you a good idea that it is cast, also take
note of the number of water outlet nozzles there are.
The heads sold by Gush Bathroom products have an internal
latex rubber mat providing the water nozzles. These are rub clean for those of us
in hard water areas.
Spun brass heads are lighter and the nozzles tend to be
inserted into the holes individually. As such they can become detached and lost
during the cleaning process. To be honest though, the quality of the shower is
no different from the cast brass construction. They will however be
significantly cheaper. Gush Bathroom Products have no Spun brass products.
Stainless Steel.
A relatively new product range is appearing mostly to
replace the cast brass type construction due to the ever increasing costs of
brass. These heads have push fit nozzles that I believed may pose a problem but
I have had one at home under test since Christmas 2010 and these nozzles have
remained in place thus far.
I have noticed however that the noise that the head
generates is much louder than the cast brass version and there are not so many
nozzles in the same area as with cast brass. There is a significant cost
advantage though. They also weigh significantly less so excerpt less forces to
the mounting arm and the wall mounts.
ABS Plastics
Shower heads and handsets with functions tend to be
manufactured from plastics and spun brass. The water outlets will mostly be
plastics, the bodies can be plastic or brass.
There are also watering can heads such as those described
above that are manufactured totally from plastics. The only Gush Bathroom
Products manufactured from plastics are the 3 handsets that have been chosen
for both their functionality and durability.
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