How to fix a toilet:
Total cost: ~$25, 4+ weeks of putting up with a whistling toilet, and a trip to Home Depot on Labor Day. Knowing how to fix your own toilet: priceless.
- Notice that the toilet is whistling when it flushes. Surmise that this is not because it feels happy about being a toilet.
- Consult the Book of John. Determine that the ballcock assembly needs replacing.
- About 2 weeks later, in a sudden rush of do-it-yourself fervor, go to Home Depot and buy a ballcock assembly.
- Realize that you need a pair of needlenose pliers, and put the ballcock assembly aside.
- 2 weeks later, in a renewed rush of do-it-yourself fervor, locate needlenose pliers and get to work.
- With toilet half-disassembled, discover that the allegedly fingertight ballcock coupling nut has been fastened by someone with finger-strength of the Hulk. Go to Home Depot and buy a wrench. Also buy a ballcock coupling nut, just in case you destroy the old one getting it off.
- Lie on floor under toilet, mumbling "righty-tighty, lefty-loosey," while fumbling with wrench. Eventually get the ballcock coupling nut free.
- Pull out the old ballcock assembly, and belatedly realize that you should have drained the toilet tank first. When spouse appears in response to screams, request a bucket and a large pile of towels.
- After mopping floor and completing the draining of the toilet tank, insert new ballcock assembly, which proves to come with its own ballcock coupling nut. Fasten the nut finger-tight, reconnect the water, and pray.
- Consult with spouse for 15 minutes on meaning of incomprehensible pictographs that constitute the installation instructions for the ballcock assembly.
- Refill toilet tank, and fiddle with the float until the water level is right.
- Cross-fingers, flush toilet, observe lack of whistling. Punch the air.
Total cost: ~$25, 4+ weeks of putting up with a whistling toilet, and a trip to Home Depot on Labor Day. Knowing how to fix your own toilet: priceless.
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Date: 2007-09-05 04:36 am (UTC)