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View Full Version : Flapper closes to soon


bac0926
May 23, 2005, 09:29 PM
I have a low flush toilet that has a problem. When you flush it instead of pushing the handle down and walking away you have to stand there and wait for the water to drain. I took the tank top off and looked in side. This is the kind of toilet that has the floater that is a cylinder on the input water supply shaft that rises as the water enters the tank. This is on the left as you look in the toilet. The handle is connected via a steel chain to the flapper which is on the overflow pipe.
When I push the handle down it pulls up the flapper however if I let go of the handle the flapper falls back down over the flush valve seat. I tried replacing the flapper but to no avail?

speedball1
May 24, 2005, 05:34 AM
I have a low flush toilet that has a problem. When you flush it instead of pushing the handle down and walking away you have to stand there and wait for the water to drain. I took the tank top off and looked in side. This is the kind of toilet that has the floater that is a cylinder on the input water supply shaft that rises as the water enters the tank. This is on the left as you look in the toilet. The handle is connected via a steel chain to the flapper which is on the overflow pipe.
When I push the handle down it pulls up the flapper however if I let go of the handle the flapper falls back down over the flush valve seat. I tried replacing the flapper but to no avail?

Easy fix! Sounds like your flapper linkage needs adjusting.
With the flapper seated the linkage wants to have 1/4" of play. Too much play and the flapper doesn't get pulled back enough giving you a short flush. Too tight and it lets water seep past the flapper. I adjust the chain by the link and if it needs fine tuning, I bend the flush lever rod a bit untill I have the desired play in the linkage. One more thing about a flapper. you will see where the old flapper hooks onto the base of the white overflow tube. On a older type with no hooks the flapper has a ring that slips down over the overflow tube to the seat. If your tank has hooks, take a sharp knife or scissors and cut the neoprene ring off on the marks provided and hook the flapper on the hooks. Leaving the ring on will interfere with the flush. The water level in your tank should be 3/8 to 1/2" below the top of the overflow tube when the tank's filled. Hope this helps and thank you for rating my reply. Tom

bac0926
Jun 13, 2005, 02:39 PM
I tried what you said and no matter where I the chain I put it the flapper still flops down when you relese the handle :confused:

speedball1
Jun 13, 2005, 03:52 PM
I tried what you said and no matter where I the chain I put it the flapper still flops down when you relese the handle :confused:
Is the flapper installed with the ring around the overflow tube or is it secured by hooks?

dokrongly
Nov 20, 2005, 07:53 PM
speedball1, thanks a million for the tip about the ring that needs to be snipped off if my toilet provide hooks for the flapper. It was easy to understand, and it was exactly the solution to my problem. I was going insane and had already replaced every piece of hardware in the tank. I wish I had come to this site sooner! You saved my life.