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T. T. T. T. is offline
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Default Possibly faulty seal beneath the flush valve in a 1935 antique Toilet

I don't know for sure whether itis a 1935 toilet or not, but in one of
the photos you could see that it says JUL 13 1935... so I guess...

wrote:
Are you sure its a 1935 toilet? Looks newer. My american standard
toilets stamped 1935 are low tank two pie toilets with tank on wall and
elboew to the bowl. They flush anything!!!!!

T. T. wrote:
Hi all, we have a 1935 American Standard antique toilet which might
have a faulty seal beneath the flush valve (for pictures please see
http://www.picturetrail.com/toilet2006/). The thing is that it is an
old toilet with brass (I guess) seal, instead of a plastic one, and I'm
not sure whether the size of the seal is different from the generic
seals that you could get from, say, fluidmaster. I changed the flapper,
but it still can not create a tight closure against the flush value.
Water still leaks down the drain (very slowly). For this kind of
antique toilet, could I still use say the Fluidmaster (fluidmaster.com)
Complete Repair Kit (model 400AK) or a flush valve to repair it?? If
not, what other options do I have to repair it?? Also, I think this is
a 3.5GL type of Toilet which is not conserving water, if I change the
Fluidmaster Complete Repair Kit, does it still flush with 3.5GL, or it
would become 1.6GL?? Thanks!