How To Install A Toilet Bowl | Best Product On The Market!
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- čas přidán 30. 05. 2024
- DANCO All-In-One Toilet Install Kit: amzlink.to/az0GSK4vRc668
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I will show you my favorite product to make the installation of a toilet bowl much easier. The key is to be able to adapt to different situations with the same product and not have to take several trips to the home improvement store to pick up different wax rings and mounting bolts.
Toilet Flange Support Kit (Sioux Chief): amzn.to/3WbuujQ
Toilet Flange Repair Kit (Oatey): amzn.to/3UfOvns
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bare handed, what a trooper.. lol
If you look ole boy has doody all over his hands :-D
Thirty years ago my dad showed me a trick. He took a regular straw from McDonald’s, cut it in half and slipped it over the bolts.
Easy alignments.
I've been installing toilets in apartments for 30+ years and the best way is, if the flange has issues, just replace it. With all the newer flanges out there that aren't the old cast iron type, they are easy enough to replace with a little thinking. If you have a low to the floor flange, use a jumbo wax ring, higher flange, use a standard wax ring or adjust your flange accordingly. Figure it out and keep all of these extra parts and hardware out from under your toilet.. I always just use a jumbo wax ring and never have a problem with them(ever), easy and simple to install, seals the gasses and leakage 100% and they will squish down throughout the years to keep everything sealed if you installed is correctly. All these adaptors will always give you more weak points, joints, seams, screws, best to keep it simple like how it was intended for, it'll last over 20+ years. Just my opinion in simple is always better and more complex you make it with all these adaptors and pieces will lead to early failure as you redo the work again in the near future. It's also a bad idea in putting so many screw holes in your floor where moisture will always be from the cold water. Just my opinion in keeping it simple...
I installed a hydroseat toilet flange repair kit. It reduced water flow & had to hold the handle for 3 seconds to make it flush. I also used a waxless donut & it always smelled gas fumes. After I replaced it with a new cast iron flange & wax ring, all is good. The toilet flushes with a tap of the handle & the gas fumes are gone. Do not try to reinvent the wheel, do what is already tried & tested. Agreed.
Yup. 8 years of maintenance here. I’ve come to the same exact conclusion. My property I’m currently at is all pvc. And they’re all breaking at the bolt slot. All the repair kits seem to raise the toilet too high and I refuse to use shims, they never hold a toilet sturdy enough. Got real good at just replacing the whole flange.
I'm not a plumber, but have installed enough toilets over the past 20 years. I've never had a single issue using wax rings. As you said, keep a few different types on hand, and you shouldn't have a problem.
Warm the wax before installing.
The wax can crack if too cold when pressing the toilet on.
I agree with keeping it simple, wax rings are the standard for 99% of toilet replacements . Never had one leak in my house replaced three toilets 40 years ago when I bought my house.
I'm a diy guy. First toilet swap ever. Wood floor messed up from previous wax ring failure, seeping water. This is an EXCELLENT PRODUCT!!!!
Speaking from experience I would not use the Danco again. The rubber to toilet seal isn’t 100% air tight and gases can escape between there. Wax to toilet is more air tight. I had to caulk around the toilet to prevent gases. As pressure change it can get under the rubber and toilet interface.
Thanks for the feedback 👍
Beat me to it. I second what Joe said. Wax rings are definitely the way to go.
But this has a wax ring it just has rubber on top too.
How do you know that gases escape from the danco product?
3:58
@@GzoGuitarWz 3:56 he was fooled
As a DIY PERSON YOUR toilet install advice was excellent. 😊
If you have the right diameter of plastic straw, you can cut off a few inches and stick them on the flange bolts. Works like the alignment pins. You could probably hack something up with painter's tape and whatever, too.
Yes, Grab a jumbo straw at your local McDonalds and cut it in half to give yourself two 5 inch locator pins. They fit a standard toilet bolt perfectly.
Two new toilets after the holidays and I will most certainly be referring to this video for the Danco's. Love it when better product is brought to market. Only took, what, a hundred years?
I've seen a bunch of videos about the Danco Perfect Seal, and this was the most comprehensive and thorough, including featuring the potential removal of the inner black plastic ring, as well as the bolts that come with the All-In-One kit. Thank you for making this video!
Agree
Hear.
Hear..
I'm a license Plumber and have used the Danco repair toilet flange kit. I also add a thin slice of wax along with the Danco . So far I've had good results and no call backs.
When you say thin slice of wax... do you just divide a normal wax ring into parts, or am I missing something obvious?
Thank you for the clear, concise presentation both in audio and visual content. So well put together.
Having set countless toilets have always used jumbo wax ring with a deflector cone. Prior to setting with the wax ring I position the bowl and use painters tape to mark locations around the base to better home in on my 'final approach'. Looks like a great DIYer product however.
Great tip and I appreciate the feedback 👍
I believe you’re talking about “the horn “
I believe the deflector cone that he is talking about is a piece of plastic that is part of some wax rings. Sort of a very large diameter funnel it's function is to protect the wax ring and help preserve the seal as long as possible.
I used one of these a few years ago in my upstairs bathroom and have zero issues with it. It was super easy and clean to install on my tiled floor.
@@thoml2353 No, nothing was wrong with my flange. I just changed out the toilet and used this instead of the wax ring. As for drilling into the tile it shouldn't be a problem if the floor has no issues with it.
Going to home depot to grab 2! Thanks- great video
🤦♀People like you are why I have little faith left in humanity.
Sure you did
@@MrDarren5012 I sure did and it still doesn't leak despite my large butt crapping on it every morning.
Very nice. There have been many improvements in this area over the years.
That kit alone makes the video invaluable. Thanks so much for the link.
I used those a couple of years ago in a super-tight space and they were great!!
I installed a new toilet in my bathroom remodel about a year ago and used this product !! it was Awesome.
Just the fact I'll never have to cut the heads of the bolts in the future because of rust is enough reason for me to use this kit for our toilets. We are just coming to the point of installing our new toilet in our guest bathroom renovation. I'm going out tomorrow to pick up this kit. Thanks 😊
Looks like a great product. I’ll definitely look for this the next time I do a toilet. It will be worth the extra money to not have a problem.
I’ve used this and it’s worked perfectly for me. No issue with gasses as someone mentioned
Great tips and products. Looks so much easier. Thanks for sharing
I agree, this product has been working very well for years now. I haven't had any problems with it and it's very easy to work with.
Highly useful for older plumbing 🙏
As usual, some of the BEST information available online. Thank you!
I just had to remove my toilet that had this kit installed 7 years ago. Everything looked good with no leaks. If the tank had'nt cracked I think it would have been good for many years. I like the new bolting method. That will be what I use on my new toilet.
never used a kit like this but done it the old way plenty of times. even for a veteran this kit looks like a great investment.
The problem with the rubber is it hardens and degrades over a few years and leaks. I have not used this particular kit but I have installed rubber rings from Home Depot into all three of the toils on my house and all of them started to leak in about three years. I replaced them with wax rings and it has been more than five years and not a drop of leakage. I do realize that this kit has the wax integrated with it but it seems to me the rubber is still the weak link in the chain.
I have had rental properties for the last 45 years. These videos are so good.
I've been using the seals with the neoprene ring instead of the wax ring for years and like them much more than any wax ring.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! I'm about to put a new vinyl tile flooring that is much thicker than the vinyl sheet flooring that came with the house. I have been dreading it because most likely I'll have to take out the old flange and install a new one to match the new floor's thickness. This will let me just use the existing flange. Perfect!
Used it over 6yrs now in different jobs and its proven to be a good product, i recommend it!
Thank you for showing how this kit works. We have 2 bathrooms with bad flanges that we intend to fix and bought this kit to reinstall the toilets once we replace the flanges. I read the instructions but your video makes it crystal clear how to deal with our situation. Love your videos for you explain things so that anyone can understand. Again, many thanks!
I used double wax before. I have seen the Danco but never paid attention to it. It is a great idea to use. Thank you for sharing
This sounds like it’s a good solution for a situation where the flange level has changed because of installing new flooring
Trouble-free and cool 😎
Wow, that kit looks awesome. Definitely going to hunt one down the next time I change out a toilet.
Your step-by-step explanation was great. Thank you!
Awesome. Nice Video. The guy who got the patten on that sure deserves his royalties.
Thanks. I just did the 4th repair like this on my guest bathroom toilet where the flange is 3/8" above the floor. Kits like these help a whole lot.
Fourth repair on the same toilet? You're doing something wrong man
As a mechanical engineer and a DIYer I can assure you the less joints and components you have, the less chance of leakage there is. Also keep in mind that you are using multiple products from different suppliers, those products weren't specifically designed or tested to work together as an integrated system and might be great products on their own but perform poorly when working together. However, as a rule of thumb, when it comes to fluids, you would want to minimize the number of joints, parts, seals, flanges, gaskets,... you use because each one of those carries a risk of leakage due to quality issues or poor workmanship and the more you use the higher the risk.
Thanks! Saw this at the Home Depot nice to see how it installed.
Great presentation!!!
The solution i have been searching for. Original cast iron flange is one piece attached to the outlet pipe. Rusted and regardless of what wax ring i have tried does not provide a flush, tight fit onto the concrete foundation. These products offered the Fix i had been looking for. Thank You for sharing🤙
Looks like the best option I've seen so far.
Danco products seem to be very well thought out and engineered. I recently replaced a leaking toilet fill valve with a Danco instead of the common fluid master and I was very pleased.
I bought 3 sets of "danco" cartridges for Moen faucets. I had to go back and replace one of each set due to leak. Most of their stuff is junk!
When I was doing plumbing, I always used a brass nut on the bolts to secure them to the flange . This made it super easy to line up the toilet( even with the tank installed) to the flange for the perfect set .
sure the good kits came that way . ever fix a case? or set one?
@@dollyhadbraces9361 Case has odd tank to bowl connection
I like the locator thingies. I had sticks that came with my toiletmaster lift jack but my friend lost them when he was borrowing it. He'd broken his arm and wrist and couldn't use both hands to lift the toilet. I have a bad back so I can't do much lifting. Got the lift jack and it saved us a lot of trouble. The Danco thing looks interesting. I've used Better Than Wax ring for my toilets and haven't had any problems. I think I need a better repair flange-- but I will need to replace/repair the subfloor first.
I believe they recommend sitting on the toilet to make sure it flattens the ring out before you secure it to the floor.
This looks like a good system. I've replaced our 3 toilets more than once due to kids using wet wipes. The wax is just so much trouble and even the jumbo rings won't seal properly if there's anything unlevel about the floor or if the ring fails to fully contact the bottom of the toilet. I used wax years ago on 2 and rubber on one. This past weekend, I replaced one of the wax with rubber because the simplicity in the install and future work if necessary. Also seems more reliable in my case.
Toilets...bane of my existence. Replacing fill valves over and over, different kinds. Just don't seem to last. Never seen a flange in a good position. Definitely going to try the Danco next. Looks good. At least trying to solve some issues.
THANKS SCOTT, VERY GOOD ADVICE…things that weren’t available in my past, but are NOW 😎🤗💚💚💚
The blue screw extensions are (almost) worth the cost of the kit by themselves. For me, setting the toilet down onto the hold down screw/bolts has always been the most difficult step of the project.
The fat soda straws, like you get at McDonald's for milk shakes, slide perfectly over the toilet bolts to make location easy. Cut a 10" straw in half for two 5" locators.
@@chrisgraham2904 Excellent idea! Thanks 🙏
@@chrisgraham2904 well played,
I like to put masking tape down on the floor even with the bolts extending outward so I can see where to put it. Those things help too.
@@mae2759 Yes, that's a popular trick used by plumbers as well.
Very cool...I will definitely use that DANCO kit the next time I remove and reinstall a toilet.
Good tips and the kit is well thought out!
Amazing. I just found out today that I would have to replace my toilet, and was discussing with my son-in-law about if we could do it. We had successfully done a gasket replacement on the tank to bowl connection at his house a few weeks ago. So we believe we can do this one ourselves. This video somewhat confirms that and provides some very helpful things to looks for and parts to use. Thank you, Scott!
You really had to discuss if you could do it yourself? It's like the simplest job in the universe. Putting oil in your car is more difficult.
@@MAGAMANyet here you are watching a how to video on it.
@@korndawggy1801 This somehow pop up on my recommendation videos. I am now as old as dirt 47 but I have learned to do this since I was maybe 12-14 or so. But yes this is a simple thing to do but plumbers want to make you think it has to be done by someone with a paper that say they are a plumber so they can charge you about $200
I used this product when we installed a toilet in our powder room. 🇨🇦💝👍
Just used this Danco installation kit and it ROCKED! The extendable bolting system alone was brilliant, I'm never using a wax ring again
Using the expression "and it rocked", is not a good description for these circumstances 😮
Good job, excellent teaching.
Good information. Thank you.
GREAT JOB Sir! Thank You so very much for sharing this with us, have a super great day!!!
Thank you very much. This will make it alot easier for this 77 yr old man.
I prefer the wax ring with the integral funnel. They can be stacked.😉👍🏼👍🏼
Appreciate the info, I have a toilet that needs resetting so this is in my near future. I added the kit to my Amazon cart with your link, thanks 👍🏻
Thank buddy 👍
THIS IS YOUR GREATIST VIDEO YET. THANK YOU. SAVED ME A LOT OF TIME.
My wife wanted one piece - skirted - toilets throughout the house we just built so we went with the fluidmaster rubber seal because its too difficult to put the one piece toilet down without having to pick it up and adjust it over and over because you can’t see your bolts…and its heavy AF. the seals have worked well thus far.
USE WHAT THE PROFESSIONALS USE A PROVEN WAX RING...
@@garyrohlman6013 I’ve seen professionals use both. I think it comes down to just doing a diligent job. Both seem to work fine when installed correctly.
Thanks for video.
The kit work pretty good. I needed to buy extra 1/4" bolts, by the way, since the supplied bolts were too short.
Looks pretty slick...
Great, informative video. Thanks, Scott.
wow look at the paint on the toilet paper holder great video and what not to do on a remodel
I know every install situation is different, but this part of the replacement process is what has deterred me from replacing a toilet. Luckily it's not broken and still works, but it's old and uses a ton of water. This has given me a confidence boost for sure, I will be picking up one of those kits.
Toilets aren’t hard to deal with just do it man it’ll be good 👍🏻
'and uses a ton of water.' Save water by displacement. Get a 2 liter bottle, fill it up with water so it won't float, and secure it inside the tank so it isn't in the way but takes up room instead of the tank water. You'll save about 2 liters every flush, of course adjust the bottle size etc so there is enough water to still flush well.
Not my idea or anything, you simply see it now and then to make an older toilet use less water.
The old school method is to place a brick or 2 in the tank.
Don't use bricks, over time they crumble & can mess up the seals in the tank. Use a rock
I used these when remodeling two bathrooms and they were super easy to use and have had no issues. Great video!
Brilliant! Absolutely Brilliant!!
Thanks Man, easy as pie.... Great advices.
I bought the Danco then changed my mind after reading the Amazon reviews. I went with a plain wax ring along with jigsawing a plastic base plate to get a quarter-inch height on my 1/2" high flange to make the flange the recommended 1/4" high off the floor. Also, dry fit your toilet and place the shims first to make it level then reinstall the toilet with the seal rings and the shims already in place.
Thank you and I love your How To Install A Toilet Bowl !!!
Great, much needed video, thanks. Amateurs and professionals should be using the new installation kits and avoiding plain wax seals. I’ve seen too many “professional” installations done wrong and have wasted too many hours trying to get a wax seal to do the impossible.
It is an excellent product and has saved me tons of time and frustration. Best $10.00-$20.00 you can spend when working on this project.
Very helpful. Thank you
Excellent video.
Very helpful, thank you
This is so great. Thank you!😀
You bet!
Looks this will really take your headaches away. thanks
Enjoyed the video very helpful. Thanks! 👍
Thank you. Great tip
This looks like a good product, thanks for sharing. A word of advice: glove up when working around toilet flanges. There can be a multitude of pathogens in that area and if you have any cuts or nicks in the skin of your hands, you could develop an infection.
Good information-Thanks 👍
I've been a plumber for over 20 years , a simple deep wax seal does the job , sometimes I'll use a Sani seal ring , I'm not trying to invent the wheel and have a call back
Yup. He is getting paid to do this. Infomercial.
I hope the instructions tell us which configuration of this great kit to use. I have rentals and do all my own work. If this works for me as it has for you it will be a huge improvement in my ability to set toilets alone (I'm 65 and it is getting harder to do).
Glad I saw this video. I am just getting ready for a toilet change and will use this.
Best of luck with the toilet swap!
Thanks for this video.
Excellent tips. Thanks
You bet!
Great advice! 👍
genius! thanks- never knew about this product!
I may have to check this out
pulled one of those out with an auger couple months ago.
Thanks again for the knowledge bud..
Yo! That made it simple!! Thank you and God bless you!!!
I thought the new rubber seals were pretty slick. I stepped up and bought one. Install was easy. Life went on. Until the kids stopped up the toilet and I took the plunger to it. Every push down blew water out from around the rubber seal. I went back to the wax seals and haven't had a problem since
I've never had much luck with any type of rubber seals on hundreds of toilets I've installed. Last week I replaced a toilet that had been installed for 55 years and never leaked with a wax seal.
Thats a pretty sweet kit.
The Danco all in one kit definitely saved me from what would have been at least a 2 hour headache caused by a really lazy or stupid contractor that built our house.
I used these 5 years ago and they work great no more messy wax and can be reused