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- 29 Aug 2015
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Hi
We have an old (1930s?) WC with a high level cistern connected to a metal (cast iron?) flush pipe. The pipe goes down the wall (bolted into place) and then turns 90 degrees just behind the toilet pan and connects to the pan horizontally. The connector is very old and disintegrating, this has been "fixed" by others over many years with layers and layers of heavy insulating tape . Unsurprisingly, there is a small leak at the join with minor dripping, which I assume (?) is from a small pool of water that remains inside the pipe just after the 90 degree elbow.
The toilet pan is cemented into a solid floor at the waste pipe, and the flush pipe hardly moves more than a few mm, so there doesn't seem to be enough play to separate the two enough to introduce a normal circular flush pipe connector between them. I guess I could buy one, cut through at the top, then slide it on and tape around it with something so at least there is a seal at the bottom of the elbow. The join is largely hidden underneath the rear of a very old style wooden toilet seat, so visually there won't be a problem. Also the WC is on the ground floor on tiles so if the solution fails and it does start dripping again it is not the end of world. Any other suggestions please?
We have an old (1930s?) WC with a high level cistern connected to a metal (cast iron?) flush pipe. The pipe goes down the wall (bolted into place) and then turns 90 degrees just behind the toilet pan and connects to the pan horizontally. The connector is very old and disintegrating, this has been "fixed" by others over many years with layers and layers of heavy insulating tape . Unsurprisingly, there is a small leak at the join with minor dripping, which I assume (?) is from a small pool of water that remains inside the pipe just after the 90 degree elbow.
The toilet pan is cemented into a solid floor at the waste pipe, and the flush pipe hardly moves more than a few mm, so there doesn't seem to be enough play to separate the two enough to introduce a normal circular flush pipe connector between them. I guess I could buy one, cut through at the top, then slide it on and tape around it with something so at least there is a seal at the bottom of the elbow. The join is largely hidden underneath the rear of a very old style wooden toilet seat, so visually there won't be a problem. Also the WC is on the ground floor on tiles so if the solution fails and it does start dripping again it is not the end of world. Any other suggestions please?