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rusty toilet tank bolts

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rusty toilet tank bolts jay-n-123@verizon.net 11-05-2007
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Posted by SteveB on November 5, 2007, 11:29 am

> In one of the toilet tanks in my house, the heads of the bolts in the tank
> look all rusty and deformed. They looked that way 3 years ago when I
> moved in here, and haven't leaked yet.
>
> Since nothing is leaking, I'm just wondering if I need to address this, or
> should I leave well enough alone. Since my female friend moved out,
> nobody is using the toilet on a regular basis.
>
> FYI: This toilet is a Gerber. Replacement of the tank bolts looks like it
> would involve removing the entire tank, because there are hex nuts
> attached to the bolts at the bottom of the tank. The nut is between the
> bottom of the tank and bowl. At the very tail end of the bolts are wing
> nuts. In other words, it looks like, to access the hex nut, this would
> involve unscrewing the wing nuts and lifting the entire tank, unless there
> are tools thin enough to reach the hex nut. Do any such tools exist? The
> gap is very small. Another issue is that the heads of the bolts appear to
> be so deformed that there isn't any slot remaining to stick a screwdriver.
> Should I leave well enough alone if it's not leaking?
>
> Thanks,
>
> J.

Exactly. Most will corrode, so the trick is when you put new to tighten
correctly and then leave them alone until they leak, or another component
goes out and you want to do a whole rebuild.

And on that point, when my mechanisms go out, I just do the whole rebuild
kit instead of a part here this week and a different part next week. I've
done so many of them, I can do them in the dark.

Steve



Posted by HeyBub on November 5, 2007, 12:40 pm
jay-n-123@verizon.net wrote:
> In one of the toilet tanks in my house, the heads of the bolts in the
> tank look all rusty and deformed. They looked that way 3 years ago
> when I moved in here, and haven't leaked yet.
>
> Since nothing is leaking, I'm just wondering if I need to address
> this, or should I leave well enough alone. Since my female friend
> moved out, nobody is using the toilet on a regular basis.
>

She may have moved out because females are finiky about their toilets. That
in itself is strange inasmuch as they don't look before they sit down...

I'd spray paint 'em with white Rustoleum (the bolt heads, not the females).



Posted by on November 5, 2007, 1:41 pm
wrote:

>jay-n-123@verizon.net wrote:
>> In one of the toilet tanks in my house, the heads of the bolts in the
>> tank look all rusty and deformed. They looked that way 3 years ago
>> when I moved in here, and haven't leaked yet.
>>
>> Since nothing is leaking, I'm just wondering if I need to address
>> this, or should I leave well enough alone. Since my female friend
>> moved out, nobody is using the toilet on a regular basis.
>>
>
>She may have moved out because females are finiky about their toilets. That
>in itself is strange inasmuch as they don't look before they sit down...
>
>I'd spray paint 'em with white Rustoleum (the bolt heads, not the females).
>

Well maybe that female that moved out is okay to use some Rustoleum on
but I'll let the OP be the judge of that <grin> .

Posted by Bumpy on November 5, 2007, 2:23 pm
I agree with Steve, Dremel is the greatest for that , with a
good metal cutting blade. I also used it under the kitchen
to cut the large basin nut because it was corroded and leaking.

I just got out the Dremel, cut the large nut in 2 pieces, and removed the
old drain in minutes! DO NOT FORGET SAFETY GOOGLES!!



Posted by on November 5, 2007, 4:16 pm

>I agree with Steve, Dremel is the greatest for that , with a
>good metal cutting blade. I also used it under the kitchen
>to cut the large basin nut because it was corroded and leaking.
>
>I just got out the Dremel, cut the large nut in 2 pieces, and removed the
>old drain in minutes! DO NOT FORGET SAFETY GOOGLES!!
>

Thanks Bumpy also for the info. What accessories did you get to go
along with your dremel? And do you have the battery or electric one?

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