No. It both comes from the same place. Just a different facet.
2007-12-12 13:03:40
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Sometimes people have water filters installed on their kitchen faucets. Otherwise the water is exactly the same for people on town water systems! All the water in your kitchen, bathroom sinks, showers and toilets is all pure fresh drinking water.
If you live out in the country, you may be on bore/well water or rainwater, or split systems between a few types of water. The owner of the house should be able to tell you what the system is.
2007-12-12 13:06:24
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answer #2
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answered by Megan T 1
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Nope! They’re the same set of pipes until the final branches into the individual rooms.
However, I suppose that kitchen pipes are generally copper and bathroom pipes may be plastic, which may introduce some health issues if something is absorbed from the pipes into the water.
As for the faucets, they’re basically the same.
2007-12-12 13:06:08
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answer #3
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answered by Andrew J 2
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None if you keep a clean bathroom sink. The germs floating around would be the difference. If you have a filter in your kitchen faucet and not the bathroom that could cause the kitchen to be better as well.
2007-12-12 13:04:04
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answer #4
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answered by papafrita_picante 3
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Nothing really, they should all come from the same main water line. They should both have the same hoses, and all the same water. The only real difference is that one comes from the bathroom, and one comes from the kitchen.
2007-12-12 13:04:27
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answer #5
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answered by deathwish644 3
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umm... well i would think the bathroom one would just have more exposure to fecal germs... BUT the actual water coming out is the same. I hear bathroom ones are better... i just cant remember why that story came up... OOO, sometimes people put filter's on the kitchen one which removes good things in the water.
2007-12-12 13:05:15
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answer #6
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answered by Ashley J 2
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Kitchen tap water is much better than bathroom sink tap because the bathroom is used to sluice all sorts of things( bodies inclusive) and there may be personal ordoors that might distort the taste of the water. It is the act of smelling and testing that is the issue here. The kitchen's tap water may be accompanied by the smell of good food and to me, that is better than the ablution room where there is toiletries and the lot.
2016-05-23 07:35:03
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answer #7
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answered by ? 3
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if both are seperate cold water taps then there is no difference providing the taps are clean. The hot tap may be undrinkable in some older properties with a header tank in the loft to sustain the water pressure as animal or bird life has been known to crawl in and drown in the tank. In a modern system this isnt possable as there is no seperate tank.
2007-12-12 13:24:14
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answer #8
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answered by mickstocks2 3
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The only difference is that one is from the kitchen and one is from the bathroom. They both come from the same place
2007-12-12 13:05:25
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answer #9
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answered by Kimberly 3
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No, usually they are the same in the US. In some houses the kitchen water has another filter on it, but tap water is safe. It can feel odd, though, and a little "taboo" to get your drinking water from the same room you pee. That is just instinct from our animal selves telling us that you should drink upriver and pee downriver or pee someplace else - not near the drinking water!
2007-12-12 13:05:07
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answer #10
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answered by Amy R 7
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