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Leaky toilets are always a cause for inconvenience. They can also mean extra costs for repairs and replacements. To help you avoid this problem, it may help to know the most common reasons why toilets leak.
Here are your most common reasons for leaking:
Any toilet bowl or tank crack is an obvious cause of leaks. Either way, a replacement is necessary. There is no other remedy for cracking, and there’s no point in delaying. Shut off the valve and cease use of the toilet at the first sign of leaks from cracking.
Corrosion results from many factors, but mostly it’s the chemical reaction of your toilet hardware (plumbing parts and the toilet and tank itself) to particles, chemicals, and other impurities in the water. This is common among submerged parts and parts constantly in contact with the water. Rusting is the result of corrosion on the metallic parts of your toilet. The corroded and rusted parts would need immediate replacement.
The toilet tank is held onto the bowl with washers and bolts. When the washers are worn out (they come with aging or may result from improper installation), the water from the tank leaks elsewhere. The washers and bolts must be replaced (if old and damaged) or just reinforced.
Aside from the washers and volts, a gasket keeps the tank and the bowl together. This three-inch contraption can corrode and therefore leak. It would need replacement.
A few small things sit between your toilet and your floor, mostly to keep the toilet ‘glued’ to the floor. One of them is the wax ring. When the wax ring fails, there is no more barrier between the toilet and the drainage pipe, so the water (dirty water) leaks out onto the floor. It should be replaced.
The float is the little buoy-like thing inside your toilet’s tank. Sometimes, it falls off its main line, gets stuck, or just malfunctions for whatever reason. Because its main job is controlling the flow of flushed water into the toilet, water overflows into the bowl when it malfunctions.
The feed line is the little tube that brings water from the tank to the bowl. It starts a leak when this gets loose or old and worn out.
The overflow tube’s main job is to stop an overflow. When something gets stuck in it, water pours over and might start a spill.
A leaky toilet should not be taken lightly. It is a waste of clean water (which can cause your bill to skyrocket), can cause damage to your flooring, or worse, can spill dirty toilet water. When you see leaks, don’t hesitate to call Fort Lauderdale’s most reliable emergency plumber, 4 Star Plumbing Services!
Plumbers are available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, including holidays. Call us at 954-776-9888 to solve your leaky toilet stat!
Sean Hasle is a third-generation plumber, serving the South Florida area with his family. He is a licensed plumbing, underground utility, and fire contractor.
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