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I tried to repair toilet - replaced all of the insides - including the seal between the tank and seat of toliet. Problem - water does not leak until I flush - then it is coming out of the seal between the tank and seat. I have tried everything to fix - do not see the problem - is there a secret I am missing??? Please help -

2007-06-14 15:40:49 · 9 answers · asked by Sandra D 1 in Home & Garden Do It Yourself (DIY)

9 answers

You are not missing a secret. Since it doesn't leak until you flush, the tank-to-basin bolts and nuts are eliminated. That leaves the seal. When you replaced it the first time, did you thoroughly clean both surfaces? If you did, great. But any residue from the old seal would be of suspicion and may harbor the leaking area. Look hard for any cracking in the leaking area. I hope you didn't over-tighten it trying to stop the leak.

These things are not always perfect. Get a new seal, maybe a better type, and patiently try it again. Get help if necessary setting the tank on basin, to ensure that you set it gently and precisely. Then reload your bolt assemblies and evenly torque them down. If it still leaks then something is cracked, somewhere.

Good Luck, hang in there, you can do it!
:-)

2007-06-14 17:31:16 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

What knid of toilet is it? Does it have 2 or 3 bolts holding it to the bowl? If there are 3 it could be an American Standard or Kohler. These toilets use EXTRA THICK douglas valve washers. If you put the regular size in and not the extra thick one that might be the problem.

Also... if you didn't replace the insides w/ what you had that could be causing a problem too. Using my last example, American Standard toilets really need to only have Americcan standard parts. It's not wise to put a Fluidmaster in.

Another thing is, water is very tricky and travels. You may think it's coming from one place when it's coming from another. put some red food colouring in the tank and flush it again. You will see exactly where the water is coming from.

2007-06-14 18:31:42 · answer #2 · answered by Fallen_Anjel 2 · 0 0

If this is Butch, I'll be there this week end. If not, here's what you do. Remove the tank, make sure it is clean and not cracked on the bottom. Now check the bowl area, you will see two bumps, these are stops for the tank when it is tightened down. You have 2 brass bolts and should have 6 metal washers.and 2 rubber washers. Put a metal washer on the bolts, now a rubber washer. Put bolts in holes in tank and put a metal washer and nut on the bolts and tighten untill the rubber washer compresses. Now set the donut seal on the bowl, make sure it fits, set the tank on the bowl. On bottom side of bowl put a metal washer and nut on each bolt, tighten them down untill the tank comes in contact with the bumps or stops, tighten the nuts a little at a time from side to side as soon as the tank makes contact with the bowl stops, tighten no more, or you'll crack the tank or bowl. I've done a thousand of them and never had one leak. .

2007-06-14 16:41:24 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would replace the seal again and make sure there are no cracks, also you have to be very carefull to replace the rubber seals at the tank bolts. there must be seals on the inside and out side bottom of the tank and be sure to use new ones not the ones you took out. Don't over tighten them or you will end up with a leak. make sure you try to tighten each side evenly, not one side tighter than the other. You also may have the wrong size main seal. Did you match the old seal with the new one? Make sure you measure the size of the tank outlet. Many times when the bolt seals are leaking it looks like it's comming from the main seal. so I would do the job over again also making sure that the bolt holes are clean and smooth on both sides. with mew bolts and seals.

Sincerely yours,
Fred M. Hunter

2007-06-14 16:06:03 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm going to assume you meant the seal between the tank and the bowl, as that's where the seat is. Other than getting it ****** off to one side so that it doesn't make proper contact all the way around, or possibly not tightening the attaching bolts evenly, I can't think of any other reason it might leak at that point. Make sure you have it tightened squarely and tightly. If all else fails try a new seal. The one you started with may be damaged by now.

2007-06-14 15:47:59 · answer #5 · answered by Corky R 7 · 0 0

Water seeks its possess degree. If there may be status water within the bathtub and the blockage is beyond wherein the bathtub and bathroom drains merge then the water will again up and positioned a regular stress at the wax ring. The wax ring is relatively now not designed to include any stress and is extra of a funnel into the bathroom drain than an precise seal. Have you smelled sewer gases? You might recognize. If so the wax ring is typically breached. I might recommend a decision to a drain cleansing provider like RotoRooter. Hey, do you possess the duplex? If now not, get the owner worried... If you reside in Sacto CA e mail my profile, perhaps I can do greater than speak to you.

2016-09-05 17:02:09 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you need to replace the ruber seal between the toilet and tank then tighten the screws real tight

2007-06-15 09:58:08 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sounds to me youve forgot to put on the doughnut washer. its a large rubber,, or sometimes foam washer that goes onto the bottom part of the syphon that protrudes through the toilet cistern. its the only thing i can think of that would cause a leak there when you flush.
good luck.

2007-06-15 08:06:13 · answer #8 · answered by JIM M 2 · 0 0

no secret but probaly you did not put tape on the screw or is not tight enough but most likely you need tape on your connections

2007-06-14 16:43:26 · answer #9 · answered by ninekittys 3 · 0 0

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