so havent had much luck finding any DIY builds for glass rinser assembly. mostly just folks installing the setup they purchased somewhere.
had a thought when i saw this item though, easy to find, relatively cheap, and could likely be hacked into something approximating a glass rinser.
it might have to be a two-hand process, one to hit the water, the other to hold the glass. but i dont think thats a big deal.
here's the item-
http://www.homedepot.com/p/EZ-FLO-Single-Handle-Cold-Water-Dispenser-Faucet-in-Chrome-10896LF/205807766?cm_mmc=Shopping%7cTHD%7cG%7c0%7cG-BASE-PLA-D29B-Faucets%7c&gclid=COzGrdWAn9ECFUOSfgod2VkNxw&gclsrc=aw.ds
three thoughts-
1-maybe installed upside down, then poke some holes in a plastic cap that would be super glued to the faucet stem in place of the black one showed here. kindy of unwieldy to design though upside down.
2- cut off the gooseneck where it starts to bend, and then either clamp/weld/solder a new spigot/spray cap onto the open stem piece. not sure of the dimensions, but im guessing you would have enough length in the straight part of stem to run it up through a hole drilled in the bar top and have the spigot almost flush with the surface. the faucet valve would be just a few inches below the bar top im guessing. give it a blast and then pour a beer.
3- cut the faucet stem right above the valve handle, fit it with a spigot/spray tip somehow, and mount the whole faucet assembly into your drip tray. you simply turn glass upside down, activate the valve handle with the rim of your glass and it sprays away. water runs down and drips into drain tray.
sound reasonable? anybody know if cutting/welding/soldering is easy on something like this?
im wondering if you could just solder it? basically you'd build up a cross bar pattern on the cutoff faucet stem, and keep adding solder to the cross until it shoots a decent spray?
had a thought when i saw this item though, easy to find, relatively cheap, and could likely be hacked into something approximating a glass rinser.
it might have to be a two-hand process, one to hit the water, the other to hold the glass. but i dont think thats a big deal.
here's the item-

http://www.homedepot.com/p/EZ-FLO-Single-Handle-Cold-Water-Dispenser-Faucet-in-Chrome-10896LF/205807766?cm_mmc=Shopping%7cTHD%7cG%7c0%7cG-BASE-PLA-D29B-Faucets%7c&gclid=COzGrdWAn9ECFUOSfgod2VkNxw&gclsrc=aw.ds
three thoughts-
1-maybe installed upside down, then poke some holes in a plastic cap that would be super glued to the faucet stem in place of the black one showed here. kindy of unwieldy to design though upside down.
2- cut off the gooseneck where it starts to bend, and then either clamp/weld/solder a new spigot/spray cap onto the open stem piece. not sure of the dimensions, but im guessing you would have enough length in the straight part of stem to run it up through a hole drilled in the bar top and have the spigot almost flush with the surface. the faucet valve would be just a few inches below the bar top im guessing. give it a blast and then pour a beer.
3- cut the faucet stem right above the valve handle, fit it with a spigot/spray tip somehow, and mount the whole faucet assembly into your drip tray. you simply turn glass upside down, activate the valve handle with the rim of your glass and it sprays away. water runs down and drips into drain tray.
sound reasonable? anybody know if cutting/welding/soldering is easy on something like this?
im wondering if you could just solder it? basically you'd build up a cross bar pattern on the cutoff faucet stem, and keep adding solder to the cross until it shoots a decent spray?