Recently rebuilt the main bath, including new flooring which meant taking up the toilet. Note first that the toilet was installed too close to the wall to begin with. Now, over the years as the house has settled and the room has slowly drifted out of vertical square, the toilet and the wall have maintained an uneasy peace. The spud washer - which hasn't been touched in ten years or more - has slowly deformed, keeping leaks from the tank at bay as the tank has been slowly pushed on from the top edge.
When I moved the toilet, I disturbed the status quo, it seems. The old spud washer fell apart in my hands, and with a new washer and flush valve, I can't get the tank bolts tight enough to stop a little tiny leak whenever then toilet is flushed. The tank simply will not line up with the toilet well enough to sit on the spud washer squarely.
So, I figure I've got two options: move the toilet out an inch or so, or get a toilet with a different, narrower tank. Question one: having never worked with an offset flange before, can one of those be added without cutting up the floor and do they work? Question two: do They make toilets with narrow tanks?
Thanks!
- Wm
Measure with a micrometer
Mark with a crayon
Cut with an axe.
When I moved the toilet, I disturbed the status quo, it seems. The old spud washer fell apart in my hands, and with a new washer and flush valve, I can't get the tank bolts tight enough to stop a little tiny leak whenever then toilet is flushed. The tank simply will not line up with the toilet well enough to sit on the spud washer squarely.
So, I figure I've got two options: move the toilet out an inch or so, or get a toilet with a different, narrower tank. Question one: having never worked with an offset flange before, can one of those be added without cutting up the floor and do they work? Question two: do They make toilets with narrow tanks?
Thanks!
- Wm
Measure with a micrometer
Mark with a crayon
Cut with an axe.
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