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 We have 2 bathrooms in our house, both with low-flow toilets. When we bought the place a little over a year ago, the toilets leaked horribly. My husband bought new flappers and installed them. Now one of the toilets is leaking again, but the other is fine. He has messed with it and messed with it and still it leakes. Just a tad, but even that is driving me up the wall, and our water bill is up because of it. The weird thing is, they are both the same kind of toilet with the same flapper mechanism. When I asked him a couple days ago what it would take to fix that dang toilet once and for all he said, "A brand new toilet?" So, UJAY, I do feel your pain!
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| Posts: 119 | Location: northern calif. coast | Registered: 05-24-03 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast


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Here are some possible solutions... I have monkeyed around with toilets more than I care to admit. 1. If the flap operates fine when the cover is off the tank but then leaks when you put the cover on, you may have some parts that are sticking up too far. Don't ask me why they design toilets so this could happen but they do. The pressure from the lid presses down on the guts of the tank and will cause any variety of problems, one of which can be that the closure doesn't seat properly. We have had to take a jig saw and chop some of the parts at the top of a tank before so that this pressure doesn't cause the insides to get twisted, bound, etc... 2. Toilets in certain runs are sometimes defective and no amount of servicing will fix the problem. We've had any number of defects come up with toilets that involve changing out the toilet as the only option. 3. Try this... this is an easy solution that has worked for me before. Hold the flap down and allow the tank to fill. Release the flap and see if it will hold after being pressed in place. If not use a heavy object to get it to stay seated. Leave the toilet be for a weekend and see if when you return if the flap will have trained itself to seat properly. What type of toilet is it and how old is the toilet versus the replacement parts? Let us know how you're doing... toilet issues are a pain in the *** 
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Platinum Enthusiast
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This is just information for those who were interested enough in my problem to offer suggestions. The leaking water closet finally got the best of me, and I decided to take the dang thing apart again. After I drained the water, I watched the inside of the drain, and saw a slight drip of water from under the gasket seal that goes between the water closet and the toilet where they join. So, I removed the water tank, and tightened the large nylon nut that presses up against the rubber gasket about half a turn. They tell you not to tighten the parts too tight, so you don't crack the porcelin, and evidentally I did not tighten the nylon nut enough. When everything was put back together, the leak was gone. Hallelujah!!!!! 
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| Posts: 87 | Location: Scranton, Pa., USA - Zone 5 | Registered: 06-04-02 |    |
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