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Reed wrote:
Tom wrote: I was in the living room when I heard a loud bang from the bathroom. There was a crack going from a bolt hole in the tank right up the side. Water was spewing out the bottom. It was lucky that I was home. After lots of reading, I've seen the following: -you can seal it -you shouldn't seal it, it will always have the danger of a leaking disaster -you can't use a modern tank as a replacement -new toilets are apt to suffer from poor flushing and many models suffer from leaks -- unless I get some $500 Japanese model I wish I could just replace or repair the tank, I'm not concerned about looks or anything. But it seems like replacing is the only option. The old toilet is maybe 1960s, 1970s? The house is 1950s. So my question is: are there pitfalls awaiting in trying to put a new toilet where the old one had been? Will the bolts in the floor automatically match up? Will the old flange need replacing? Anything else? Thanks. Have you looked into used, second-hand plumbing outlets for a matching tank ?? My local "Habitat for Humanity ReSale" shop probably has 30 old toilets of various vintages for sale right now. Around here, Habitat calls it ReStore... I'll second that. And since you need to take it all apart anyway (can't trust tank-bowl seal once it has bounced around in a truck), drop a rebuild kit in as you put it back together, and you should be good for 20-30 years. I was just at the local ReStore yesterday, and even in this small town, they had at least a dozen all lined up. Helpful hint- make a cardboard template of the base outline of the existing toilet, from centerline in back, to centerline in front, and take that with you. Some number 12 electrical wire bent to match the contours will get you started. (Or scribe it Norm Abrams style, if you know how to do that, and have a set of dividers.) Use that to mark the cardboard, then cut and test-fit. This half-template will make narrowing down the used or new toilets a lot faster. Just slide it around the demo unit, and you know instantly if you will have ghost outline problems. Don't forget to make a mark on the template where the the bolt hole is. -- aem sends... |
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