Stuff splashes when you wash dishes. And now you have to remember to turn the faucet off every time you need to use it in the other sink. The guy complaining about wet lines from the edge of the sink being wet is complaining about a very common thing, from splashing. I feel like I’m explaining how to tie shoes at this point…
I kind of like this actually, it’s unique
https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgflip.com%2F31blu5.jpg&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=a84661eca1f07450cb959905a993236a81c651688610f8caeb8d9c4601ed4b66&ipo=images
It also saves you from the dreaded “wet line on the T-shirt” when you wash by hand.
There are a million solutions to this that don’t involve angling the sinks tho.
I’d bet the amount of water on that center section is quite a bit. It’s probably always wet tshirt time at that house.
Do you always turn the faucet to the max or what?
Stuff splashes when you wash dishes. And now you have to remember to turn the faucet off every time you need to use it in the other sink. The guy complaining about wet lines from the edge of the sink being wet is complaining about a very common thing, from splashing. I feel like I’m explaining how to tie shoes at this point…
There’s no way I’m careful enough to avoid that.