Sunday, October 14, 2007

Replacing a toilet - my way...

Here's how to replace a toilet. Um, well, at least it is ONE way to replace a toilet.

1) Notice crack in bowl of toilet. Realize that toilet is not leaking water, so ignore for 5 years.
2) Get annoyed by toilet making funny noises at night, because the flapper-valve is slowly leaking water. Promptly address this problem by getting up and closing bathroom door so you can't hear the funny noises anymore. Continue doing this for another 2 years.
3) When flapper-valve finally breaks, rendering the toilet useless, un-fixable and un-ignorable, go to Home Depot and buy $79 all-in-one-box toilet replacement. Congratulate yourself.
4) Get up Sunday morning and start dis-assembling old toilet. Spill very much nasty water all over bathroom floor. Curse. Scare dog by shouting. Consider just burning house down.
5) Finally get water line disconnected, toilet tank resting on its side in shower, and old toilet bowl leaving rust mark on carpet. Address the icky wax-ring leftovers. Gouge said icky wax-ring leftovers off closet flange with finger. Get icky wax-ring leftovers all over both hands. Curse more.
6) Clean fingers with industrial-strength carcinogenic solvent.
7) Examine closet flange and realize it's broken and must be replaced. Consider just putting new toilet on the old, broken flange anyway, but then decide to "do the job right." Congratulate yourself again. Stick washcloth in stinky sewer pipe and head back to Home Depot.
8) At Home Depot, look around for 15 minutes before finally finding someone who knows something about plumbing. Take his advice and buy a new closet flange, new water-supply line and PVC cement. Go back home.
9) Find that washcloth has fallen down into sewer pipe, but is still visible. Realize that those long "hook-out" pliers in your tackle box are the perfect tool to retrieve the washcloth. Spend 20 minutes moving crap around in the garage to get to the shelf where the tackle box is. Retrieve "hook-out" pliers and take back to the bathroom, and realize they're too big to fit down in the sewer pipe. Curse more. Stick your damn arm down in the pipe and grab the fucking washcloth. Wonder if you have enough gasoline to get the house going good.
10) Try to cut top of pvc closet flange off of sewer pipe with hacksaw. Take hacksaw blade out of handle because it-just-won't-work-right with the handle, and try holding the blade by hand while cutting off top of flange. Scrape all skin off knuckles. Cut 3/5 of way through flange before giving up and just breaking the damn thing off with a very large screwdriver. Curse more. Consider hiring a plumber.
11) Again using hand-held (and now bent and twisted) hack-saw blade, cut down through sidewall of remaining closet flange where it is glued into pvc drain pipe. Give up and chip the rest of the flange out of the drain pipe with same large screwdriver and hammer. Congratulate yourself for being wise enough to put the damn washcloth back down in the drain pipe where it was to catch the pvc chips as they fall. Clean out pvc chips and washcloth, and congratulate yourself again. Wonder if you have any beer.
12) Using pvc primer and cement as directed, glue new closet flange into drain pipe. Dismiss thoughts that it looks like it is sticking up too high.
13) Test-fit toilet and realize that the t-bolts are WAY too long if you're ever going to get the decorative caps to cover the bolts. Take bolts and get in car.
14) Go over to parents' house, because they have a vise and a functional hacksaw, and cut the t-bolts to length. Go back home.
15) Put t-bolts in flange. Turn new toilet upside down and install new wax ring. Place toilet on new closet flange and t-bolts. Squish everything down really good. Install washers & nuts and tighten.
16) Install tank on toilet, despite the total lack of functional directions. Congratulate yourself again.
17) Hook up new water-supply line to tank. Turn on water. Turn off water. Mop up water. Re-tighten water supply line. Turn on water. Check for leaks, find none. Congratulate yourself.
18) Intall valve handle. Hook chain from flapper valve to handle. Flush toilet. Find no leaks. Begin to realize you are a naturally gifted plumber.
19) Wonder why the flapper valve won't stay up and let the water drain, requiring you to hold the handle down to flush the toilet. Curse. Try again several times, noting that nothing changes. Check useless directions. Check warranty. Consider burining house down. Look at flapper valve again and finally see the teeny-tiny rubber band they put on it at the factory to keep it from flapping in shipping. Remove rubber band. Find that toilet flushes perfectly and doesn't leak. Consider opening a plumbing school.
20) Attach toilet seat and lid to toilet. Notice large sticker on the front of tank advising you to remove the rubber-band from the flapper valve. Curse.
21) Check toilet and find that it is very wobbly and the front lower edge is about 3/8" off the floor. Think this is probably not good.
22) Eat lunch. Drink beer. Fall asleep watching football.
23) Wake up when fiancee calls you on the telephone to say she's coming over with her dogs.
24) Go back to Home Depot. Purchase 20 washers. Go back home to find fiancee there with her dogs.
25) Try to find level. Ask fiancee where level is. Thank fiancee for showing you where level is.
26) Using level and washers, shim up toilet until it is more or less level, if you don't really look too closely, and so it doesn't wobble anymore.
27) Caulk around bottom of toilet.
28) Flush again and find no leaks. Sit on toilet and feel no wobble. Congratulate yourself on being the best fucking plumber in Florida.

Time: 7 hours.
Trips to Home Depot: 3
Trips to parents' house: 1

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Consider hiring a plumber." Only good idea you had the entire day

Anonymous said...

i was with you totally in your technique (though i used a wood-chisel instead of a screwdriver to dismantle the flange) and that is where i left it washcloth and all still wondering how i can replace the flange and keep the pipe from leaking, searching the web for answers , and i found your hilarious but not quite sufficiently explaining the merging of a broken flange and a new one. please elaborate

pATRICK said...

>not quite sufficiently explaining the merging of a broken flange and a new one. please elaborate<

I don't think you want to "merge" a broken flange and a new flange. I had to completely get rid of the old flange by chipping it out of the pvc drain pipe where it was glued in, and then glue in a new closet flange. On further reflection, I think I may have used a closet flange made for tile, because it stuck up too high from the floor, necessitating all the shim work (shimmying?). Of course, I am the LAST person on earth who should give plumbing advice. Good luck to you.

Varg said...

I went through the same situation a while back except it involved 5 Depot trips and a bonus Ace trip.

Pell said...

Dude your f'ing hilarious. Love the post! I feel your pain, I love the part of opening a plumbing school, because I was just replacing the wax ring on my old toilet and thought the same thing! lol

Pell said...

Dude your f'ing hilarious. Love the post! I feel your pain, I love the part of opening a plumbing school, because I was just replacing the wax ring on my old toilet and thought the same thing! lol

Anonymous said...

I'm trying to fix a flapper problem and have never worked in (not on, but in) a toilet before. I stumbled on this post and have to say, I cracked up! So, so funny! Well, gotta go, I'm off to the hardware store absolutely knowing what I want, only to be humiliated by a salesperson who will ask a single question, causing me to realize that I don't know what the heck I'm doing. Still, it's kind of fun pretending to be a plumber.

Unknown said...

hilarious, thanks for the much needed laugh as i try to remove my old f...ing flange and replace it. great story

Alex Clark said...

Haha, I laughed hard at your post. Hope you still check comments! I'm about to install some tile flooring and the current flange sucks, but I dont want to destroy the concrete subfloor replacing it. I think i'm just gonna glue a new flange into the existing one. :)

Jamie said...

Beautiful work there. I'm at the stage right now where I've bolted down the toilet on my new ceramic floor and it's looking awesome, congratulate myself. Then as I do the easy part and put on the tank, I notice it's too big!! Won't fit because it's too close to the wall. Who'd have thought that 40 years ago they put in toilets that were 10 1/2 inches from wall to drain when the standard today is 12". Curse, curse cursed, and all my knuckles are bloody!!

You say it better.

 
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