3

Background:

I wanted to replace the wax ring on my toilet but when I took it apart I found that the flange was in bad shape. The notches that hold the bolts were broken out. That, I think, led to the toilet wobbling, which led to a leaky wax ring.

The flange was screwed down and the screws were rusty and I was stripping them trying to get them out, so I had to chisel the flange apart and remove the screws with some pliers. The flange was the kind that fits inside the pipe. It looked like this after I had broken up the top of the flange and removed the screws:

enter image description here

That's a tile floor, slightly crumbly around the hole (it doesn't look as bad in person). You can see the little piles of rust where the screws were. Finally, I used a saw and chisel to remove the last of the flange from the inside of the pipe.

The problem:

Once I got the flange out, it looked to me like there was another layer in there. I mean it looked like the pipe contained small second pipe, into which my old flange had been inserted. I began chiseling that out as well when I stopped and wondered whether I should be doing that. It didn't seem that the inner layer was coming out as cleanly as the flange had done. At this point it looks like this:

enter image description here

I believe that's purple PVC cement around the inside. You can see that there appear to be two layers. On the right you can see where I started chiseling out the inner layer. On examining a bit that I chiseled out, it does appear to be an inner layer. Here is a photo of it. You can see some printing on the outside surface (by which I mean not the purple side).

enter image description here

The question(s):

What now? I'm up to my neck in this project and I'm not sure how to proceed. What do I need to do in order to prepare this pipe to accept a new flange? Should I stop now and just install a new flange in the pipe as-is? Do I need to remove that inner pipe? And the big question, is it time to admit defeat and call a plumber?

3
  • 2
    It looks like a reducing bushing, do you have access below the floor? Or is this a slab?
    – Ed Beal
    Feb 23, 2018 at 0:16
  • It's on the second floor, so I can't get at it unless I open up the floor or the ceiling below it. Feb 23, 2018 at 3:22
  • 1
    Tried test-fitting a new flange? If it fits inside the "purple" ring then you should have been good to go. After chiseling out part of the old pipe though I'm not too sure if there's a pipe filler type material, caulking might be a real hack fix...
    – Xen2050
    Feb 23, 2018 at 3:27

1 Answer 1

5

enter image description here

Investigate the push tite replacement flange

It may be that the rubber gasket will form a seal below the damaged portion of your waste pipe. If it slides into the pipe and seats against the floor you can anchor it to the subfloor and you're back in business.

To see a variety of parts made for your kind of trouble look here

1
  • Kris you beat me to it - great job.
    – Ken
    Feb 23, 2018 at 9:37

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.