Flush
How to Fix a leaky Toilet by replacing the Float Valve
The toilet float valve allows water to enter the tank of your toilet, when the water level rises so will the hollow float / ball, at some point the float will reach the highest level and shuts off the valve which then turns off the water supply to the toilet. When a float valve or ballcock wears out it will not close properly anymore and water will slowly start leaking into the toilet bowl.
How to Unclog a Toilet Using a Plunger or Auger
Once in a while when we flush toilets, instead of the water going out of the toilet bowl down into the drain, the water will come back up together with what you just deposited into the toilet. To help you learn how to unclog a clogged toilet there are a few simple things to keep in mind while unclogging the toilet.
Save Water With Dual Flush Toilet Tanks
Dual flush tanks on toilets give you two choices of flushing the toilet. It's an innovation in toilet plumbing this new toilet design that helps to save water. The dual flush toilets and low flow toilets are quickly gaining interest in countries where water is in short supply, but are also gaining popularity among concerned consumers in the United States.
Toilet Wont Flush
A very common bathroom plumbing problem is having a toilet that won’t flush properly or won’t flush at all. If the toilet doesn't flush at all, now matter how hard you pull the handle, then there could be a couple of things wrong with it, depending on the type and brand of toilet you have.
Concentric-float fill valve
The most common flushing mechanism used by professional plumbers nowadays is the more modern flush valve assembly that is all plastic with only a few moving parts and only one little circular rubber part controlling the flow of water to the tank, called a “Tank fill valve”. The newer concentric-float fill valve consists of a tower which is encircled by a plastic float assembly. Operation is otherwise the same as a side-float fill valve, even though the float position is somewhat different.











