Rotted Toilet Flange and Toilet Replaced - Ahwatukee, AZ (03/20/21)
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- Опубликовано: 21 мар 2021
- Plumbing Express
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Thank you for taking the time to go through ALL the details with those of us that are novice and need complete and thorough advice! There will always be situations in this old house we just cannot tackle, and I just wish this city had a plumber like YOU that did such a meticulous and organized job. You are obviously concerned about your clients. God Bless you for being such a caring soul!
Since the double wax install is the first time I've seen that done, I think having the video of the toilet being "smushed" onto the rings would have made this an even better video.
YA i was waiting for that too
Would like to see camera put down In toilet. Took one off, wax half plugged septic pipe?
me too --- just removed a toilet & the wax was smushed inward taking up valuble pipe diameter @@brucecampbell3062
I also like it when they call in the homeowners wife who is 300 lbs and have her sit down and seat it. "Wiggle a bit honey, a little more, perfect, thank you."
@@brentbarnhart5827😂
I will say one thing, your the cleanest plumber i,ve ever seen.
He even looks like Mister Clean, with the bald head and muscles 😂
Only thing I needed to seen you place the bowl back in place.
Thank you. I like that you let the camera run long enough to give an example of the patience and persistence that it really takes to get a good result in a situation where things have decayed.
From start to finish-a perfect job.
You can get that rusted flange off in 10 min with a dremel. Put a rag in the sewer line while your working. Master Plumber 50 yrs.
Those dremels are life savers!
I also ran into the issue with having a void around the flange in my downstairs bathroom thats on a slab. What I did was mixed up a batch of Sakrete anchor cement and poured it into the void until it was level with the top of the slab. Its the consistency of Hersheys syrup before it starts to set and flows in and filled the gap perfectly. Once it dried I was able to then drill holes with a masonry bit and screw down the flange with Tapcon concrete screws. Solid as a rock.
Yeah seems like that beats the toilet pulling up on on the toilet PVC drain. I think that’s what he anchored it to.
What a fantastic tool you have by filming your projects. Anytime a customer questions why you did something you've got the whole job recorded. I always thought a good tradesman never minds when people watch them work. Good job buddy.
Because that flange wasn't bolted down that toilet will move regardless of what you said
Just took my toilet out to find the flange completely rusted out. This was a great video to show me how to accomplish a replacement. Great to know I can get that in stainless. THANKS!
get a last name.
i think overall you did a very good job, just would have liked to see the toilet get set down on floor
If replacing a round front bowl with an elongated bowl and toilet is on the wall next to entry door that swings in... make sure door will clear front of new bowl. It may be a round front for a reason. Measure twice, install once.
I always use some TP (it's usually right there) to cover the hole. As for the amount of wax, I think a extra thick wax is good enough. If you squeeze too much wax when you're seating toilet you run a risk of it actually going into the waste line and clogging the hole and or catching TP when flushed and down the road you'll have a clog. I can tell when this happens and I get wax on my toilet snake. Good video and love the clean work area!
Do you think mines ok I just installed one myself i just used the one that came with the toilet itself i think just a ordinarly standard one.
One should be ok right?
@@akanesoratobu8889I change probably 10 toilet already, just with 1 wax ring and never had problem, nobody I know use 2 wax rings
@@ThanhBui1 good to know thank you. I recently got mine changed by a plumber and he mentioned he only put in one wax ring so now i feel relieved.
thank you!
I agree. Using two rings is trying to solve a problem that usually does not exist. All they can do is cause a problem in the future.
The flange was level with the top of the tile. It would have been better if it was about 1/4" higher, but one ring would have been more than sufficient fot that toilet.
If, when when you go to set the toilet, it rests on the tile without compressing the wax ring a bit, then the flange is far lower than spec and needs to be addressed. @@ThanhBui1
Great video, however I use 1 1/2 wax or extra thick and apply appropriately. ALWAYS ADD SCREWS. Please note, bolts should not be angled after setting the commode. A indicator the toilet is not centered. 45 years in the business
always bring the flange up , never use 2 wax. all flanges are ment to be secured. first time it gets a good bump IT WILL SPIN
1st I appreciate your attention to wanting to do this job correctly & 2nd I appreciate that you are so tidy!!!!
Don't get it. What's keeping that flange attached? Didn't show setting toilet on double wax? Don't know!
Not much, the end of the sewer pipe under the toilet has a lip on it that is holding the flange to the floor (sort of) but it could be overcome if the pipe gets brittle or the toilet gets moved (someone twisting around while sitting on it). The flange needs to be secured with concrete anchors but some people believe in doing the job fast instead of right.
Very informative for this DIY, wanted to see the toilet placed on two wax rings. Good job!
Thank you so much for this video. I was in the situation where the toilet flange was completely rusted out and I didn't even know what pieces where what. I was able to get it all out eventually and now I'm much more confident in getting everything done right! Thanks again!!
Great job on replacing the flange. Wish all plumbers were detailed like yourself…..impressive!
Job well done except for the fact that he put the toilet water into the bathtub. Yuck!
He should have have put the toilet water into a bucket first and then put the toilet water back into the toilet after the installation of the new toilet was finished.
@@simon6071 I missed that. Nasty plumber.....😆
@@ronzo7238 Did you get a long vacation after contracting an infection from the toilet water by taking a bath after the plumber just left?
@@ronzo7238Oh, excuse me. Did you mean you missed that nasty plumber as a form of sarcasm or you mean you failed to pay attention of the nasty act that he did with the toilet water?
I am little confused. Were you not supposed to screw flange to sub floor? Only thing holding is plastic PVC lip.Doubling up wax also seems excessive since you run the risk of it collapsing inwards blocking the pipe.
My son and I feel more confident about our toilet repair plan. Thanks for sharing
Great video. The only difference, to save time and labor we use an oscillating tool to if needed to be cut out, the bolts, rusted pipes and especially a messy flange. Best tool ever made.
My Dad invented those there called the Clam I'm happy too see you using them we make them in Erie ,PA.
Is that true? That is pretty cool. We stock all 17 trucks with them, they can really be a lifesaver!
Your Dad is an inventive/mechanical genius!
Nice, for real? I just found and ordered myself one earlier today after realizing the Oatey split ring creates a 'hump' instead of leaving you with a flat surface. No idea why they designed it like that....
A pair of needle nose vise grips work wonders. I think they make an extra-large thick wax ring.
Good job thanks for sharing..
That was a hell of a job you did !. What I liked most is how cleaned you did your job and that my friend goes to show you how responsible you are in executing your job.
I’ll never understand why people don’t remove the tag on braided supply lines. 🤨🤷🏻♂️
One tip: I watched another video of flange replacement and they made tape and marker marks on the floor where the flange bolts are prior to removing them. That way when putting the new one in it's easier the figure out where you want it. And makes it easier to replace toilet as well
It's not rocket surgery. It can be off as much as 1/2 inch and still bolt up to the toilet just fine.
Nice touch, vaccum to water line. You're the cleanest plumber on earth!
Thanks, very informative. People may not know this, but when using an open ended hacksaw, always install the blade so it cuts on the pull stroke not push.
Do you mean unlike a conventional saw and more like a Japanese saw? Is that because it’s less apt to cause damage?
@@DonaldDump2024 The blade will flex and bind if set up to cut on the push stroke.
You are relying on two tiny screws to hold the toilet in place 😳. I would have screwed the double ring to the floor.
He explained there was nothing underneath to screw it to.
@@jesusagonzales9485 There’s concrete he could have tapped into. He said in his experience once the ring is tight it would slip out or turn or what not.
Agree. I didn't secure into the concrete with this exact same repair 3 years ago. Visiting family started dancing on the toilet and it turned (spun) enough to have it leak all over the floor. Now I have to do the job all over again.
@@YoComment “dancing on the toilet”? This family should never be served alcohol. ;-)
Usually the floor is rotted around the flange also I usually go in the basement and run a piece of one by two wood and from the bottom when you screw down the flange it has something to bite into.
Great video , Awsome professionalism.
I know you make customers feel good.
Though all the difficulty you win Gold.
Forever a fan🎉
I'm currently struggling getting my flange out. good video 10/10
First of all, excellent video. You let it run pretty much straight through, with your thoughts in real-time. Especially liked when you had to solve problems along the way, on the fly. And you kept a clean work area, minded your tools, and protected your knees.
I do have a QUESTION though: So, the way you have the repair is that you use a flange that sits underneath the lip of the drainage pipe. (I recently had a old 4 inch diameter metal pipe, rusted metal flange issue, but used an OAKEY Replacement Flange that inserts down into the pipe, thus having a flat and wide flange body to then (1) anchor into the concrete below first, then (2) install the upward-facing bolts to the toilet. However, in your fix, because the flange does NOT sit atop the pipe (in the Oakey model), but sits BELOW the pipe top ‘lip’ loosely, and adheres to it by two tiny set screws and nothing below to sit on -- is that not a secure fit? Won’t the downward weight of the toilet when set onto the flange, that is not yet attached to the toilet by two upward bolts, cause movementof that flange downward? Yes, I suppose that as yiu tighten the bolts on the toilet, that will move the flange back up against the lip of the pipe -- but for instance, if one of the tiny screws fails, that flange will bend and break below, and you’ll never know, as it’ll still feel like the toilet bolts are tightening. I thought you were going to add back a mortar/cement base, after determining the level you needed after setting the replacement flange. Bring the replacement cement up to that height. Then wait a day or two to cure, then set back your replacement flange as you did - but now, there’d be “a solid, level floor” underneath your flange AND more than enough real estate to anchor in some cement screws to anchor that flange in place. So, you’re depending on the toilet sitting flush on the floor and not moving by virtue of the weight to be the KEY. Because there is no anchor at all to the house itself, only to the plumbing pipe! The side to side movement (if there’s any extra weight placed suddenly against the toilet) will shift against the pipe, as that’s the only connection to the toilet. No additional anchoring to a wood subfloor, concrete, or other house part. (Hopefully folks will be gentle in terms of getting up and down and not shifting too much side to side. It would be fine then).
As a former sheet metal mechanic/duct man, I am appalled at your use of those snips at 14:25 sir 🤣
Great job, Enjoyed the full video and the explanation of everything you were doing at the time you were doing it!👍
You’re pretty good yeah I was wondering about the drain I didn’t see you put a towel something to make sure nothing fell down the grade that’s only thing I didn’t see but I learned a lot from you thanks man different type of flange too
He almost lost a screw driver and some hardware down that pipe....
@wellnesswisdom-vi2sb. However, he did lose some of the flange down the pipe🫤 at the -22:57,58,59,23:00 mark
I wish I could post the pictures on here how I fix and set it. You'll never have a problem with the screws coming up from the soft wood floor or rotted wood floor around the flange and I usually put four screws when I set the flange definitely need 1 x 2 under that wood floor around that flange so the new screws have something to really bite in
At 21:36 Noticed object fell into pipe : / , not sure why you didn't pull that away when you had the chance..? It may be a good idea to to block the pipe so nothing falls in that can not be retrieved later (during clean up), otherwise looks ok.
I admit, that was a complete accident. And it definitely is a good idea to cover it with something so that doesn’t happen. But when you really think about it, the nut is so small, and it bounces so far in a four-inch line, it would be pretty hard to pull out and just not worth it. It’s not really causing a problem anyway if it goes down there. But it shouldn’t happen in the first place. Thanks for watching.
@@TOTALTECHAZ It was actually a broken piece of the flange. Might want to look into it some more to prevent any issues down the road.
This is a repair flange. Temporary fix. Not code. A flange must be secured to the pipe with a water tight seal. Either leaded, or use a 4x2 cast iron compression flange. Sure, you will find ABS or PVC pipes and flanges. They are code. But they fail faster because they warp or break at the closet bolt connections.
Thanks for the video. You did a good job of explaining all the detail's. I just had the same problem this evening.
Thanks for the video. When I purchased mounting bolts, the pack only came with one washer and nut and referred to using a piece of plastic to hold the bolt up (which wasn't included). Just before the big gap in your video due to your camera battery dying, I noticed you used a nut to tighten each bolt to the flange so they stand straight up and are secure. I think this is a good idea, and saw this tip in another video, and thus others should ensure they in face have TWO washers and TWO nuts for EACH bolt.
In another video I saw use of green painters tape on the floor with a line drawn in marker exactly where the bolt holes are. The missing piece from this video is the part where you "horse walk" the toilet over the bolt holes, then set the toilet down slow on the wax seal. Wax needs to be at room temp. Then I guess you could apply downward pressure with your hands, or sit on the toilet gradually, then tighten up. I am going to try an extra thick wax seal, versus an ordinary one, or two stacked.
For those keeping an existing toilet, it is likely important to also clean off the old wax clinging to the underside of the old toilet.
Suggest users use a stuffed rag to cover the big drain hole (reduces sewer gas, and chance of guck falling in, or important parts falling in). Remember to take out the stuffed rag before the "horse walk".
Thanks again for your efforts to help us.
Buy tank kit it has all the nuts and bolts
I take entire tank outside and wash it with soap and water hose down like washing a car, before i reassemble
Great job..nice details...Thank you.
I am a 69 yo woman who appreciates this video because tomorrow this job is on my list of things to do. Thank you
Oh…a plumber that knows how to use a vacuum cleaner!
I try.
Great Job, you definitely take pride in doing your job. Thks,
Great job and very helpful video. Thanks - from neighboring Fountain Hills, Arizona.
Next time stuff the hole with a clothe or something but be careful not to let it fall in. I learnt that from another video. They said poisonous gasses aren't good. I think they have a point. :)
Back when I was a second year apprentice I thought I left a rag in the WC flange when I mounted the WC because someone "borrowed" the rag I had. I had to remount 4 Toilettes and I never did find out where the rag went. The foreman was mad, I can't really blame him. After that I came up with a system. I'd tie teflon on the water line and only remove it when I removed the rag.
Good fundamentals and work ethic. The problems I see:
1.) Always bolt toilet flanges to the floor. The holes are there to prevent left and right shifting. Shifting will cause the wax ring to wane and some other plumber will be judging your work.
2.) Always plug the opening with a rag while chipping or opening hardware packages. I saw you almost dropped the hardware down the sewer. I'm guilty of losing stuff too.
3.) Dump the wastewater outside. Homeowners don't like seeing that especially if they use the tub for bathing kiddos.
4.) When the flange is level to the floor, you don't need two wax rings. The distance has already been predetermined from finish floor..
5.) Always double nut the tank. They make thinner nuts for this task.
6.) Always cut labels off supply lines. Why leave them to get gross and make you look lazy?
7.) Use smaller closet bolts. Tall bolts make you lift the toilet higher. This could be problematic if installing under a banjo top.
8.) A small dap of clear silicone under the mounting tabs of the toilet seat helps tremendously.
I admire your cleanliness. No critical errors except for numbers 1 and 5. Keep up the good work!
I would have replaced the whole flange look like there was enough concrete when he took out that old ring to use tapcom screws, always make sure the tank to bowl bolts are tight enough seen to many leak from not being tight enough
Great job I like your patient of cleaning everything as you go
I use Stainless Steel replacement rings & bolt them to the floor. I usually try to orient the new flange so the bolt heads are at the end of the narrow slot where it is strongest. I fasten the hold- down bolts to the flange itself, as he is doing. I only use 5/16" Brass bolts & nuts. The Big Boxes have cheaped out & gone to brass plated steel bolts, which rust & rot out, plus some are thin. Check them with a magnet before buying. You may have to go to an old hardware store or supply house to find the heavier brass bolts. Although they have "snap-off" bolts, Do Not try to bend them over & snap them! You may warp the flange or Crack the toilet base! Use a mini hack saw/ etc. to cut them off! Not a fan of the new plastic hold - down nuts! I only use large brass nuts & metal washers. You may need 2 wax rings if it is an old 4 inch cast iron flange. I shape one to fill the gap around the flange then set one on the flange. I use extra wax to seal all holes in the flange & around it's circumference to protect the subfloor in case of leaks. After l set the John, l seal it to the floor with an adhesive caulk like Loktite/ Polyseamseal & clean up with a rounded grout sponge After l test the toilet for leaks. Best to always change the water supply tube up to the tank since it may be deteriorated or have a different seal footprint where it connects to the fill valve.
You can use a plunger and plunge the remaining water out of bowl when emptying it. There will be a little left, but won't spill out unless you intentionally tip bowl when removing
It's really only worth considering doubling up on the wax when your flange is below your finished floor. If you use 2 waxes all the time you are just wasting wax.
Yes,also potentially restricting the outlet of the wc with extra wax too,which I've seen before .
@@bapox3707 I've never seen it but i'm not a service plumber, I mostly work on new construction.
@@krakenthrottle2199 I did some service as an apprentice and a couple times the call was about a poor flushing wc .Also,the wax rings with "horn" can get dislodged if you use a closet auger through them,and cause the seal to be destroyed .Stay in new construction! Service is shit
@@krakenthrottle2199 You just seen it. From the looks of the amount of wax the prior guy used it was hanging into the waste pipe.
@@tomlangley6236 No doubt. Oh well. Not my circus not my monkeys.
I like that you care about the job you do. You did a great job. I’d hire you in a heart beat 😊
Why would you not anchor that repair ring? Tapcons, hydraulic cement, anything. One good bump and that toilet is going for a ride.
some plumbers are lazy
Great video ! Detailed explanation with excellent camera work. Now confident to replace broken casr iron flange. Thank you!!!
IF the problem was that the leak / problem was the tank leaking, why are you replacing the whole toilet instead of fixing the tank leak?
Same reason my friend was suckered into buying an entire new $400 center console for her car by the dealer when the defective spring clip sells for seven dollars on ebay.
@@deconteesawyer5758 😱
Awesome! This is exactly what I needed to see. This girl is redoing her half bath, and I found out I needed to change the flange and had no idea how to do it. Unfortunately, my do-it- all father lives 600 miles away and my wonderful husband is an attorney, so you know...😆 Thanks for walking me through it!
So, you are saying that your attorney husband doesn't do what a real men should know how to do.
@@corin164 I am saying that we work with what strengths we have. My husband may not be a diy guy, only because he does not like it, but he can do just about anything -- far more than I can do. I do the things I am good at --which is DIY so I guess by your argument, I am doing guy things -- he handles the things at which he excels (I won't list them because I don't want to sound like an arrogant, egotistical, entitled, stereo-typical housewife). We make a good team.
@@NicBran07 It was not too long ago, all men knew how to maintain a household with the need basic skills. Far too many of today's men, have shirked their responsibility to take care of their family regardless of their employment or financial status. One should always look at the world as if it were in chaotic state and consider what would it take to protect one's family from lack of shelter, famine and safety. I dare say that far too many men would fail if faced in that situation.
not good.
If a criminal defense attorney, he should be used to handling shit.
Must be a commission paid plumber. Here's how to tell:
1st I've rebuilt many tanks in this condition. Older toilets flushed better.
2nd The difficulty in removing the flange ring is because although it was a bit rusty, it was still stout.
3rd 100% of the bowls I pull leaking at the base has a "No-seep" horned seal under it. That's why the ring was rusty. There's a reason 100% wax seals seldom ever leaked, they seal.
At least you used a metal ballcock nut. And do clean up the work nicely. 😋
Also use some tap con concrete screws, even though I may not pull past the hub…it still can twist. Guy is trying but wouldn’t fly if he worked for me
Agree. I didn't secure this exact same repair 3 years ago. Visiting family started dancing on the toilet and it turned enough to have it leak all over the floor. Now I have to do the job all over again.
@@YoComment Do it right or do it twice.
I like how you clean up . You did a great job just the way I would have done it. Keep up the good work.
When you look at the paint at the end and compare to the beginning you can notice the location has shifted. How is that possible? If I were the owner I would have ask for a redo. Also the repair was to fix the leak not to redo the flange. Although the video is didactic I see a lot of questionable practices, as also raised by other comments.
I am sure that you have broke few toiletts already,screwing down to the floor ! :D
You really should secure the repair flange to the floor with concrete anchors......leaving it unsecured is just lazy and potentially dangerous, the anchor holes are there for a reason. I am a fan of the extra thick wax ring but using two when the flange was pretty level with the floor seemed excessive (the flange was not recessed deep into the floor like in an old house). This was a quick and easy way to do this job but not necessarily the correct way. A few more minutes of work would have ensured there are no issues with this install for many years to come. This install will probably leak in a few years when someone leans to one side too many times or twists to reach the toilet paper too many times.
I thought you have to put caulk at the bottom around the toilet? I did that kind of replacement few years ago in my house but I put white caulk over there.
@@Voltomess caulk is not enough to secure the toilet to the floor, the caulk just minimizes sewer gases venting into the room and water if the wax ring isn't holding anymore. The flange has to be fastened to the wood/concrete sub flooring.
With a properly mounted toilet, the caulk has nothing to do with sewer gases, which wouldn't escape from the wax seal. It is there to prevent water from the shower, bathtub or basin from getting under the toilet and rotting the wood. @@andrewarmstrong3556
I often rely upon a battery powered Dremel with cut off for these situations. Thanks for the video
He does great work, and clean too.
14:55 Remove hold down screws in flange, take out flange a with nail bar, works for me. ( Clogs pipe first )
Pretty solid repair and installation.
Very good job
Clean and new
I used the same type of flange because mine was completely rusted out. I didnt screw into concrete because i didn't have a hammer drill. i worried my toilet would move around but it's been more than a year and no movement at all. i didn't use a wax ring, rather i used a rubber one, also no problems. Although your video didn't teach me how to do this, it's reassured me that my toilet should be ok.
Great job! Thank you.
Thanks. Good job!
Great video! Super helpful. I love seeing DIY videos by thorough, conscientious, knowledgable people.
First advice to the customer: "clean your damn restroom"
Normally, the renters would not clean the bathroom.
That’s what I do every day! I did 6 repair flanges and two subfloor repairs
OMG! Your cleanliness is admirable if not envious!! Qustion: What is the safe tightening maximum for the bowl to flange bolts before tragic disaster happens with the toilet bowl flagnge?? Keep up the great work and hire yourself some techs and get a few trucks on the road. Thanks!!
Too much wax when you double it up . It will partially block drain hole . Just lift it and look under . You will, see too much wax in hole when you double it up.
Wax gotta go somewhere
Those snap around flanges don’t work unless they are bolted to the floor. Master Plumber out of Pennsylvania
Aww fudge. The guy claims he does not do shitty work, and here we go to find out otherwise.
They do though… if they never, they would not spend extra time and cost to create a lip that catches the flange.
Also double wax ring
If they are bolted to the floor? Then do they work?
This is held in by the grace of God and 2 wax rings this toilet isnt going anywhere
Thanks for your reply! :)
I like this work so much.
Well thankyou for showing this video .I do have a wet floor in my bath room to replace and when I do it I have to take up the tolet to replace everything I can see but now I know so thankyou
Wish you showed the toilet going into place after new wax ring assembly
Getting that old rusted flange removed is the most time consuming part of this job. I'm so glad they make those two piece flanges that fit into the groove. Separating the entire assembly from the main pvc pipe can have its disadvantages, especially when you're cutting and chipping away several pieces to break loose the pvc cement bond, and not hurting the integrity of the main discharge pipe that may let the sewer gasses sneak by into the restroom. That is always my main concern.
Your video was very helpful. On to Home Depot I go!!
Awesome Work.
Very helpful video....was really wanting to see how you pressed the two wax rings down....that part was left out....
Very neat!!!
i, replaced my old round front toilet with a water saver elongated chair hight, re placed comode flange wax ring supply line and a quarter turn angle stop complete installation with toilet shims and clean area in 45, minutes kauking arond base / no complaining, good video
Great video! You're a natural born teacher. I do wish you had shown you actually placing the new toilet onto the wax rings
yea! what was up with that?
Maybe he didn't want to show the struggle wiggling the bowl down to compress all that excess wax - some of it protruding into the flange opening.@@tellmesomething2go
@@buggsy5 i know all about installs
@@buggsy5 My thoughts EXACTLY!
I have done this much like you, but I always clean the flooring thoroughly before reinstalling the toilet.
Are those 'Clam' rings OK to use underneath the head of a PVC flange? The metal ring on mine rotted off, all that's left is the PVC hub. (It's on the 2nd floor so not in concrete.)
If you don't like leaks that rust out closet flanges & flooring, use a felt lined wax ring, or neoprene [for wall mount W.C's] You will thank me later!
Why do I feel like I'm watching someone who pulled a toilet for their first time?😄
you do so .nice job and clean i . see to many plumer do so mess
Thank you.
Thanks! This really helped me out and gave me much needed knowledge on what to do
Professional skills sir 👌
great video, thank you, Now, I am not sure if putting simple regular wax ring was okay. Saw so many videos before this one, unfortunately, and they all use different types of rings. The double ring, yep did not do that either. hopefully can figure how to fix the little leak, the flange thing was okay. The biggest issue, was the being terrified that palmetto bugs would come up the pipe, as they had twice. So maybe a little leak is not that bad. I will try to remove the washers off the bolts, push down on the toilet with my 120 lbs, and then tighten more. Thanks for having trouble, since that seems to happen every time I repair anything.
Great job bro
At least you still had the cast iron pipe in the floor intact. I have filled one using bronze and an acetylene torch, although with difficulty. By the way those blue plastic toilet rings are a thousand times better than wax rings. Wax rings are a mess
Great video.Main products: sealing gasket,gland packing,PTFE/graphite/asbestos products, ceramic fiber products, high temperature heat insulation and fireproof material.