Laguna Brass 3340CP Mobile Home Two Handle Non-Metallic Adjustable Garden Tub Filler, Chrome Finish
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Product Images
Product Features
- Two handle non-metallic (plastic) adjustable tub Filler
- 3 hole installation ideal for manufactured, modular, and mobile homes
- Lever handles with quarter-turn stops for ease of operation and precise temperature control
- Washer less cartridge ensures long lasting use
- Easy installation
- Two handle non-metallic (plastic) adjustable tub Filler
- 3 hole installation ideal for manufactured, modular, and mobile homes
- Lever handles with quarter-turn stops for ease of operation and precise temperature control
- Washer less cartridge ensures long lasting use
- Easy installation
Product Specifications
Brand | Laguna Brass |
Mounting Type | Deck Mount |
Finish Type | Chrome Finish |
Material | Plastic |
Color | Chrome Finish |
Number of Handles | 2 |
Included Components | Faucet |
Hole Count | 3 |
Special Feature | Easy to Install |
Handle Type | Lever |
Installation Type | Widespread |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 13.4 x 8.7 x 3.1 inches |
Model Name | Mobile Home |
Handle Material | Plastic |
Spout Height | 1.9 Inches |
Spout Reach | 6.6 Inches |
Handle Location | Side |
Manufacturer | Laguna Brass |
Part Number | 3340CP |
Item Weight | 1.2 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 13.4 x 8.7 x 3.1 inches |
Country of Origin | Taiwan |
Item model number | 3340CP |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Finish | Chrome Finish |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Certification | ADA Compliant |
Special Features | Easy to Install |
Usage | Residential use |
Batteries Included | No |
Batteries Required | No |
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Product Price History
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I’d spend 2-3 times the money and do it right with a quality metal assembly if I could go back and do it over again. If it happens to fit your tub as an exact fit and replacement, then there’s a chance it will be ok, but even then, it’s iffy due to the poor quality of the plastic nuts and threads that hold the knob assemblies in place. In my case, the original holes in my tub are too big for the nut below the knob assemblies to catch on the tub, so I had to cut and create two thin metal plates to go on the underside of the tub in order for the nut below the knobs to hold the knob assemblies in place. I feel like the manufacturer should have forseen this possibility and provided an optional larger washer or wider nut for these circumstances. There are many thousands of mobile home units like mine that have this exact setup. Also, the hoses provided are too long to fit correctly and too short to be looped or bent enough in order to work and are required to be bent in a manner that put them in a serious bind in order to work, which creates a pulling or pushing effect on both of the plastic assemblies beneath each knob, causing the knobs above to twist so they aren’t properly aligned. I feel like simply providing longer hoses would have been the right thing to do, so that they can easily be looped or bent to take up any extra unneeded slack. Tightening up the nuts beneath the knobs would normally hold these knobs tightly in the orientation that you want them, but of course doesn’t work here because it’s just cheap, ill-fitting plastic and the threads slip and strip when you tighten them and then they won’t hold any friction or pressure at all, thus allowing the whole knob fixture to twist and turn out of the alignment you need it to be in. So now my knobs face whichever direction they want, which is not the orientation they need to be in due to the undue pulling effect due to the ridiculously short hoses, and the whole knob fixture now turns when I turn the knob because the cheap, poorly fitting plastic nut that’s supposed to hold these in place just strips out when I tighten it much at all. I now have to spend more money to buy far longer hoses to go from the mixer to the knobs so I can loop the extra slack without putting undue pressure on the knob assemblies, and probably either find some metal nuts that will match the threads on the plastic fixtures below the knobs or just permanently glue the lower knob fixtures in place in order for them to face the correct direction and not look sloppy and misaligned. This is the most likely fix, which will require far more work and time than I’ve already wasted on this junky setup in the tightest area I’ve ever worked in before, and will require physically breaking or cutting the knob assemblies apart in the case that any repairs ever have to be made in the future. If you just need a quick, cheap fix and want to take a gamble, then go for it, but if you want to get a quality, no hassle garden tub spout and knobs that you will never have to worry about again, then I’d go ahead and spend the money on a proper, name brand, regular home plumbing fixture rather than cheap plastic junk. I now wish I would have, 2 hours of aggravating work later and still needing to spend more money and more time to make this even remotely fit and work correctly. For a new installation, you can measure your holes to make this fit exactly and hope your plastic nuts don’t strip like mine so that your knobs stay correctly aligned. But if you’re replacing a broken garden tub faucet in a mobile home, you’re just taking a gamble as to whether or not this will work for yours or not.
Didn’t get the right parts in box. The media could not be loaded.  I liked the faucet just what I needed but the hoses will not work. (See video) can you please send correct size hoses/. According to the schematics in the photo on line they should be shorter.Thank youRoxanne M Finklea
Works fine. Made of plastic. Must be careful when installing it. Works like it’s made to.
Plastic. The whole thing was made out of plastic!
Good quality for the money. packaged well and was as pictured. easy to install. looks good