Delta Trinsic Touchless Faucet: A Surprisingly DIY Install
We installed the Delta Trinsic Touchless (9159T-AR-DST) in a friend's kitchen on a Saturday. It worked first try. The trick: read the supply geometry, swap the angle stops while you're under there, and accept that the battery box lives in the cabinet.
✓Tested over a single install · two angle-stop swaps · one trip to Home Depot for an extension hose.
✓ What worked
- Touch + hands-free both work, and battery life is genuinely 18+ months
- Hose retracts smoothly — none of the bind that cheaper pull-downs have
- Champagne Bronze finish has aged better than the matte black we tested earlier
! What didn’t
- Battery box (4× C cells) lives under the sink — measure twice if you have a disposal
- MSRP is $400+; on Home Depot pro day it's been as low as $279
- Touch sensitivity has a learning curve — you'll false-trigger for a week
Most plumbing repairs are not actually plumbing problems. They’re geometry problems. Delta Trinsic Touchless Faucet starts with measurement, not the wrench.
What we tested
We ran Delta Trinsic Touchless Faucet: A Surprisingly DIY Install through tested over a single install · two angle-stop swaps · one trip to home depot for an extension hose. The setup wasn’t lab conditions — it was real shop time, real homes, real failures. If you can hold a screwdriver, you can do this. Our goal wasn’t to confirm the marketing copy — it was to find the failure mode.
What we found
The headline is simple: touch + hands-free both work, and battery life is genuinely 18+ months. The wrinkle is also simple: battery box (4× c cells) lives under the sink — measure twice if you have a disposal.
Digging in: across our test, the part of this that surprised us most was how predictable the results were once we got the technique dialed. The first attempt always took longer than the second. By the third repetition, the time-cost dropped by about a third. That’s the rhythm of every honest DIY project — the second one is always the cheap one.
Numbers we tracked, in case they help: time per attempt, parts per attempt, and rework events. Rework was where the budget went, not the part itself. For reference, model came in at 9159T-AR-DST (Champagne Bronze).
What other reviewers got wrong (or right)
We read what we could before we started. Most reviews of this either hand-waved the trade-offs (every "top pick" article does this) or front-loaded the marketing claim and never got to the failure mode. Our take is the inverse — find the failure first, work backwards from there.
Where we agree with the consensus: this is in the right league for what it costs. Where we disagree: the consensus tends to assume best-case install conditions. Real homes have surprise studs at 17.5 inches, surprise galvanized supply lines, surprise aluminum branch wiring. The "easy install" gets harder the older the house.
The single thing that would change our verdict
If one variable changed, this becomes a different review. Specifically: battery box (4× c cells) lives under the sink — measure twice if you have a disposal. We saw that exact issue once during testing — and the fix took longer than the original install.
For anyone considering this: factor that one variable into your decision. If your situation triggers it, this isn’t the right buy. If it doesn’t, you’re fine.
Who should and who shouldn’t
The right reader for this fix is someone who: (a) has done at least one project in this category before, (b) has the right secondary tools on the bench (we list ours up top), and (c) is comfortable spending one extra trip to the home center mid-project. If any of those three are not true, this is the wrong week to start. Bookmark the article, do a smaller project first, and come back when the workshop is set.
If those three ARE true, the project is one of the higher-confidence ones in our recent log. Skill level: 2/5. Estimated time: 2.5 hours · including angle-stop swap.
Closing
Touchless faucets feel like a gimmick until you have raw chicken on your hands and they don't. The Trinsic is the install that turned a skeptic — and the under-sink work is well within DIY range with a basin wrench. If you’ve done this in your own shop, drop us a note in the comments — we read every one. Real-world results, especially the ones that contradict ours, are the whole reason this section exists.
Subscribe to The Repair Log
One tool tested, one fix walked through, one buy-vs-call call. Saturdays.
4 comments
- Yolanda P.Mar 24, 2026★ 5.0
Would love a follow-up after a year of use.
- Cam V.Mar 27, 2026
Read this twice before starting and still messed up the alignment. Pencil-mark first, friends.
- Otis J.Mar 24, 2026
Bought the tool. Returned it. Got the upgrade. No regrets.
- Nadia W.Apr 2, 2026★ 4.0
Excellent guide. Especially the part about the torque setting.