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Replace a toilet - plumbing.straw.toilet PEP BB

BB plumbing and hot water - straw badge
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This is a badge bit (BB) that is part of the PEP curriculum.  Completing this BB is part of getting the straw badge in Plumbing.



In this Badge Bit, you will replace or reinstall a toilet.  Teenagers break the toilet while playing football?  Time to put a new one in!

Here's a video of replacing a toilet:


To complete this BB, the minimum requirements are:
  - remove and reinstall a toilet, or
  - replace a toilet, or
  - install a toilet in a new location

To show you've completed this Badge Bit, provide proof of the following as pics or video (less than two minutes):
  - the existing location before you start
  - the toilet removed
  - the toilet installed
COMMENTS:
 
steward
Posts: 15505
Location: Northern WI (zone 4)
4846
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Approved submission
As part of my basement bathroom floor tiling job, I had to remove and reinstall the toilet.  Here's the evidence:
Before-I-started.jpg
Before I started
Before I started
The-toilet-was-level-that-s-how-bad-the-floor-was-.jpg
The toilet was level, that's how bad the floor was!
The toilet was level, that's how bad the floor was!
Removed.jpg
Removed
Removed
Reinstalled-with-new-tile.jpg
Reinstalled with new tile
Reinstalled with new tile
Staff note (Mike Barkley) :

I certify this BB is complete.

 
pollinator
Posts: 258
Location: Pacific Northwest
111
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Rebuilding a house, replaced the toilet first.  For reasons.
20211116_151507.jpg
old crusty boy
old crusty boy
20211116_151151.jpg
Hole in the ground, after the adapter went in
Hole in the ground, after the adapter went in
20211117_120958.jpg
Ready to use, custom plumbing for the interim
Ready to use, custom plumbing for the interim
Staff note (gir bot) :

Paul Fookes approved this submission.
Note: Congratulations. I certify this BB complete.

 
pollinator
Posts: 1495
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The toilet had to go . . .

We inherited a 1950’s bathroom, not in a good way. On the project list is to rip it out and install a modern efficent bathroom. I wasn’t planning on doing anything unitl I had installed a second bathroom so we could still ive in the house as I renovate. The house had other ideas . . . If the house had a motto it would be “If it ain’t broken, it will break”. Overnight the flushing mechanism broke. I took one look inside and desided to replace the whole toilet. The replacement toilet can be removed and reinstalled during renovation. Other reasons for removing:
1) I hate the colour
2) The seat is broken and due to age I hadn’t found a replacement
3) It takes 16 seconds of pressing the handle to flush so my teenage boys only half flush or don’t flush at all
4) 3.5 gallon flush!
5) It’s tiny . . . I don’t need to go into details but sitting as a bloke requires careful positioning!

I replaced it with a toilet that is anatomically better designed. It has a 1.25 gallon flush which is instant. I paid extra for a touchless, single press option because it greatly increases the probability of use by my teenage boys. The water saving alone is nearly 10,000 gallons a year or 37,000 litres based on a family of four using it three times a day. (Pretty mind blowing).

So here are the steps I took with photos.


Old tiny toilet with massive water tank


Mostly wax . . . But not all. Yuck.


The plumbing cleaned up nicely. It’s all copper. I used a heat gun to melt off all the old wax.


New wax ring on underside of new toilet


Test flush


All installed

Tools:
Wrench
Philips screw driver
Socket set
Dremel to cut the old bolts - rusted solid
Heat gun to melt wax
Rags from old bed sheets
Mop and bucket
Sponge for removing water from old toilet
Measuring tape

Purchases:
Two toilets - I’ll be replacing the downstairs one next
20 inch hose - 14 or 16 would have been better but the next size down was 12 inch which is too short
PTFE tape
Staff note (gir bot) :

Mike Haasl approved this submission.

 
Edward Norton
pollinator
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Just realised I’m allowed up to ten points for duplicates, so here is the second toilet installation completed yesterday.

When we moved in the toilet was hissing. The house had been empty for three years.  There’s a lot of iron in our water and the continuous running of water had left the bowl badly stained and the flush mechanism was in very poor shape. As with the previous toilet, this one has a 3.5 gallon flush which I replaced with 1.25 gallon flush.


Old toilet


Iron stains


Toilet removed


Base unit installed


Shiny new water efficient toilet

Happy wife . . .
Staff note (gir bot) :

Mike Haasl approved this submission.

 
Posts: 95
Location: Billings, MT
53
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Replaced a toilet.  Old toilet was short and round, new toilet is tall and elongated.  Did not get a great pic of the old toilet in place, but it should suffice.
Old-toileta.jpg
Old toilet, short and round (bad pic, apologies)
Old toilet, short and round (bad pic, apologies)
Old-Toiletb.jpg
Old toilet off and away
Old toilet off and away
Nasty-old-drain.jpg
cleaned up, old bolts removed
cleaned up, old bolts removed
ready-for-install.jpg
New bolts, and new ring
New bolts, and new ring
New-toilet.jpg
New toilet, tall and elongated
New toilet, tall and elongated
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.

 
He got surgery to replace his foot with a pig. He said it was because of this tiny ad:
Christian Community Building Regenerative Village Seeking Members
https://permies.com/t/268531/Christian-Community-Building-Regenerative-Village
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