tanneranders
May 16, 2011, 08:02 PM
A little background. My son-in-law had a little spill out of the shower, hitting the toilet on the way down. This knocked the toilet completely loose. I was amazed that both brass closet bolts could snap so easily. Well after removing the toilet and scraping up the wax, I could see why.
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/t-anderson/utf-8BSU1HMDAwNjItMjAxMTA1MTYtMTkyMS5qcGc.jpg
This was not a standard closet flange with slots for the bolts. It is cast iron with the bolts set right into the iron, and snapped clean off, with no way to remove them.
My first thought was an Oatey Cast Iron Flange Replacement (http://www.oatey.com/Channel/Shared/ProductGroupDetail/106/Cast+Iron+Flange+Replacement.html).
At this point, I've run into three problems.
First, the flange is too long. In the pic, you can see that just a couple inches down, the pipe curves. I found that by removing the bottom sections of the flange, it will fit, but with no seal. So I figured come sealant is in order. This is the least of the problems.
Second, the holes in the flange sit above the old iron pipe/flange, so I can't secure it. Perhaps drilling through the iron is an option?
Third -and this is the kicker- when inserted, the top of the new flange sits almost a full inch above the floor. Needless to say, the toilet is well off the ground when sitting on it, even without the wax ring installed.
So I guess what I need to do is somehow remove the old iron flange, exposing the floor beneath, and somehow lower the top of the pipe a bit. I have read that a whack with a chisel should crack the flange and allow for removal from the pipe, but I want more information before I attempt this.
I don't see a distinctive seam between the flange and the pipe. Where is it? Does the iron flange just go around the outside of the pipe? Is that the transition I'm seeing between lighter and darker metal on top? Or what?
Any help would be appreciated.
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/t-anderson/utf-8BSU1HMDAwNjItMjAxMTA1MTYtMTkyMS5qcGc.jpg
This was not a standard closet flange with slots for the bolts. It is cast iron with the bolts set right into the iron, and snapped clean off, with no way to remove them.
My first thought was an Oatey Cast Iron Flange Replacement (http://www.oatey.com/Channel/Shared/ProductGroupDetail/106/Cast+Iron+Flange+Replacement.html).
At this point, I've run into three problems.
First, the flange is too long. In the pic, you can see that just a couple inches down, the pipe curves. I found that by removing the bottom sections of the flange, it will fit, but with no seal. So I figured come sealant is in order. This is the least of the problems.
Second, the holes in the flange sit above the old iron pipe/flange, so I can't secure it. Perhaps drilling through the iron is an option?
Third -and this is the kicker- when inserted, the top of the new flange sits almost a full inch above the floor. Needless to say, the toilet is well off the ground when sitting on it, even without the wax ring installed.
So I guess what I need to do is somehow remove the old iron flange, exposing the floor beneath, and somehow lower the top of the pipe a bit. I have read that a whack with a chisel should crack the flange and allow for removal from the pipe, but I want more information before I attempt this.
I don't see a distinctive seam between the flange and the pipe. Where is it? Does the iron flange just go around the outside of the pipe? Is that the transition I'm seeing between lighter and darker metal on top? Or what?
Any help would be appreciated.