The earliest cold and hot water mixing Faucets was a double-knob faucet. The user needed to turn the knob to control the cold water and hot water to adjust the amount of cold and hot water, so as to mix into the warm water that needs the temperature; the second-generation cold and hot water mixing faucet is The core of the single-handle faucet is a ceramic sheet temperature regulating valve core. The user can swing the handle left and right to adjust the temperature of the mixed water, and swing the handle up and down to adjust the amount of water. However, when the water pressure of hot or cold water suddenly changes, or the temperature of hot water suddenly changes, the above two mixing faucets must be manually operated to re-adjust the water temperature.
The thermostatic faucet can automatically balance the water pressure of cold water and hot water in a short period of time through the thermostatic adjustment valve core that comes with the faucet, so as to maintain the stability of the outlet water temperature without manual adjustment.
The standard Thermostatic Faucets has a knob on the left and right, and the left knob adjusts the water temperature: screw it forward, the water temperature drops; screw it back, the water temperature rises, but it won’t work when it reaches 40°C. This is because when the water temperature exceeds 40℃, it is easy to burn the skin. If you need hot water with a higher water temperature, you must press and hold the red safety button on the knob before you can continue to screw it back. The right knob controls the water outlet mode and water volume: when the scales are aligned, it is closed; screw it forward, the lower the water spout discharges to water, the more you screw it forward, the greater the amount of water; the back screw, the more water is discharged from the shower, the further you screw it, the greater the amount of water.