Discuss Leaking Toilet Drop Valve.... in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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GaryTheGolfer

OK, on the heels of my first post and the helpful comments, I thought I would have another go....

A couple of years ago I refurbished a house I rent out. I put in two toilets with double push button flushing (Bowden cable flush rather than hydraulic type). The house is in a very hard water area.

You're ahead of me.....The drop valves both dribble. I suppose the good news is that the dribble just goes into the bowl. I changed the washer/valves and cleaned the (porcalein?) valve seats. The leak is much better now but it still dribbles very slowly.

The basic design seems very poor: The drop valve tube is very light (plastic) and doesn't seem inclined to fall vertically....so the valve doesn't seat perfectly. Putting on an engineering hat, I thought a little strip of lead around the neck of the drop valve tube would help. It did, I'm now down to a very small dribble.

But these should just work shouldn't they? If I had an (old) syphon system, there would be NO possibility of a leak would there?

Are there any tricks/tips to fix this annoyance (apart from changing the cistern)? I can't be the only person with this problem....am I? It feels like a dripping tap problem. I know I'm not paying (water-meter) bill but I am fed up with the hassle from tenants.

Thanks in advance for any help.:(
 
i hope no one is drinking from this as lead is banned you know?

for £40 why didnt you just get a proper plumber out?

no it wont happen with a syphonic flush!.

are you sure its not just the over-flo?.

where is it filling too?.
 
NEW SYPHONE !! The rubber seal losses its elasticity , can extend the life a little bit buy removing scum from rubber seal and seating with white spirit , some say that you can remove the seal and turn around and refit ,not tried that myself though.
 
i hope no one is drinking from this as lead is banned you know?

for £40 why didnt you just get a proper plumber out?

no it wont happen with a syphonic flush!.

are you sure its not just the over-flo?.

where is it filling too?.

Well.......
The reason for not calling out a plumber was er........£40
The drop valve leaks all the way from empty (after a flush) to full: Its the valve that leaks not an overflow issue.

I was hoping for a solution....perhaps what a plumber would do....for £40 or so.

A competent DIYer should be able to solve this shouldn't they (assuming they know what the solution is)? After all I happily managed to fit ball valves to the cistern water supply pipe without any problem....specifically so that any maintenance problems could be made easier.

I did try cleaning the original valves. It only helped very marginally. I tried fitting new valves and things got better. But there is still a dribble. Is there a good solution to this?

These are Wirquin in case that makes a difference.

Thanks
 
its not a cure to the problem, but this might provide a solution.

put a weight on your drop valve, i used to use an piece of lead 1 1/2" about 2cm long from my scrap bin!

good luck
shaun
 
I think I fixed one of these last week and just couldnt see how the original design could ever last that long as some of the bottom sections of these valves rely on a perfect fit with a really thin washer . My second best advice would be to take off the cistern and replace the drop valve with a brand new universal one. Make sure you know weather or not it is 1 1/2inch or 2 . A diy'er would be able to do this... especially if he was a plumber. My first best advice if you dont want to spend £ 40 is to phone up your local fasttrack plumbing course provider and pay a student a tenner to fix it ! Bear in mind he might not be insured rather like the diy'er.;)
 
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