Home Improvement Asked on November 29, 2020
We have an American Standard toilet (I’m not sure of the exact model, but it looks something like that Champion 4). When first installed, it worked great and it was indeed a one flush device. Beautiful it helped greatly.
Now the water goes through, but there is nearly zero pressure so the rest doesn’t go through without a plunger…
I’m thinking that this type of toilet has additional pipes that allow the flush to function. i.e. the water doesn’t just pour in the bowl, I think it is poured through another pipe and that pipe may have some residue in it prevent the normal flush functionality.
I’ve been looking for information about that toilet mechanism and I’m probably really bad at searching for it… Do you have any details on how to properly clean such a toilet pipes? Do you have an schematic that would show us how the pipes are actually laid out?
Here is a picture from the side:
In the picture, I added a red line which represents the top of the waterline in the bowl.
As we can see on this picture, there could be a pipe between the water taken and the flushing pipe coming from the bowl (just over the red line toward the left side of the picture).
Also there seem to be a small pipe between the larger pipe just under the bowl and the one going to the ground.
All of that makes me think that there could be debris clogging those pipes.
Just in case, I had a plumber come by and he was not able to fix it. He checked the pipes and they’re clean, the water flows as expected, no clogging down there. So that’s the toilet which has a problem. It was also snaked, but that’s probably old technology on a modern toilet which doesn’t help…
Given all of the steps you have already done I would go the cheapest and most effective route. Get a couple gallons of muriatic acid (big box).
Pour about a 1/5th of the container down the tank drain - directly. Let it sit 3-4 hours. Flush and repeat as many times as you can. You need ventilation in the room, you will not be able to use the room at ALL during this process, and this will effectively destroy anything blocking any "holes/drains" in your toilet. I have effectively spent $5-10 and restored 50+ toilets to like new condition using this method, some not draining at all.
Wear gloves and goggles and wash off anything that gets on your right away. Do not leave these containers around small children.
Answered by DMoore on November 29, 2020
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