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Plumbing
for your toilet
Here we offer general instructions and
precautions for roughing in, as well as installation procedures
for tying into your present drain waste vent and supply
systems. When all the roughing in has been completed and you are
ready to assemble your toilet, your rough plumbing should
resemble that shown here.
Most Common
Mistakes
- Violating or ignoring local code
restrictions.
- Using pipes that are too small.
- Attaching copper to galvanized without
using a brass or dielectric fitting between the two.
- Not using Teflon tape or pipe compound
at threaded joints.
- Not leveling your fixtures when
installing them.
- Not installing an air gap filling for
fixtures.
- Cutting supply stub outs too short to
install the shutoff valves onto after the finished wall is
in place, or
- Not properly aligning tubing into
fittings or stop valves. (Forcing the nut onto the
compression ring at an angle when the tubing is at an angle
will cause a leak.)
- When turning the water back on in your
home, always run the outside hose valve or flush your
toilets to bleed dirt and air from the lines. This debris
can cause problems in your sink faucets and other plumbing
trim.
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Installing
your Toilet
Pipes required include a cold water supply
stub out with a shutoff valve, flexible tubing for above the
valve, and possibly one air chamber.
This is possibly the single, most
troublesome fixture to install as it requires its own 2"
minimum vent and a drain of at least 3" in diameter. If the
toilet is situated on a branch drain, it cannot be upstream from
the sink or shower. The minimum side distance allowed from the
center of the toilet bowl to a wall is 15 inches 12 inches
to a bathtub, and clearance from the front of a bowl to a wall
or fixture should be 21 inches.
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| 1. The closet bend and toilet
floor flange must be roughed in first. When replacing a toilet,
you will need to scrape up the old wax gasket. A putty knife
works well for this. Remove the old bolts from the floor flange
and scrape the flange clean to prevent leaks at the base of the
new bowl. If the old flange is cracked or broken, replace it
with a new floor flange.
2. Position the floor flange so that the
underside of the flange is at the level of the finished floor.
(it is always best to install the finished floor so that it runs
underneath the toilet.) You may need to use a piece of finished
flooring material if the floor has not yet been installed. Now
you can finish tightening the screws that hold the floor flange
to the floor. Put a small level on the flange while tightening
to be sure it is level.
3. Set the new floor bolts in plumber's putty and insert
them through the flange, adjusting the bolts so they
line up with the center of the drainpipe. |
4. With the new toilet bowl turned
upside down, position the new wax gasket over the toilet
horn on the bottom of the bowl.
5. Apply plumber's putty around
the entire bottom edge of the bowl.
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6. Using the bolts as
guides, lower the bowl into place over the flange. Press
down firmly while giving a slight twist. It is important
that you feel the toilet being pushed into the wax ring.
If you do not feel this, the flange is set too low and
you will not get a good wax seal between the flange and
the horn (waste outlet). Also, if the wax ring is cold,
it will not properly seat. You may need to warm it in
the sun for awhile until it is pliable.
7. Use a level to level the bowl, adding shims
where necessary. Also be sure the toilet
is square and aligned with the wall. Then
tighten the nuts and washers onto the bolts by
hand. |
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| 8. Place the
rubber tank cushion (if one is needed) into
position on the rear of the bowl and fit the
rubber gasket onto the flush valve opening on
the bottom of the tank. |
9. Position the tank over the bowl;
then tighten the nuts and washers onto the mounting
bolts.
10. Tighten the hold-down bolts at
the base of the bowl with an adjustable wrench. Use your
level to assure the bowl is still level.
11. Fill the decorative caps with
plumber's putty and place them over the bolt ends. Seal
the base of the toilet bowl with plumber's putty or
silicone caulk.
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| 12. Cut the end of
your supply line stub out and attach a shut off valve.
Then, connect the shutoff valve to the flexible tubing
and connect the tubing to the bottom of the tank, where
you will find a supply stub out. |
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