Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Wobbly toilet!
17 Answers
My downstairs loo moves whenever anyone sits on it! Is there any easy way I can fix it to my concrete floor? There are screws in the base fixing it to the floor and I assume they need to be longer but is anything else needed? TIA
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by crapmemory. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think re-screwing it will need to be done, but there might be difficulty inserting a drill bit if the screw-hole needs re-drilling. Does it wobble as if the floor beneath is uneven? Or is it just the normal shuffling action of sitting down? If the concrete floor is uneven you might try easing some pieces if slate under to wedge it, like a table leg.....Another fix - but absolutely no going back so be careful - would be to us an expanding builder's foam - protect with polythene sheeting everywhere and anywhere you don't want this stuff to stick, including you hands - insert the 'straw' nozzle under the gap and squirt. Whn it has cured, trim off any excess.
Hi Crap ............. if the floor's even, it sounds like it does need re-drilling.......... if you can't manage that ............ as Shed suggested, silicone sealant. Before applying it ............... run around the joint where the pan touches the floor with a hair-dryer to make sure everything's completely dry. Get it nice and warm. Silicone is hopeless if there's any moisture around, but will stabilise the pan a treat. Run a bead around .......... the way you would between a bath and a wall.
-- answer removed --
is this a serious question? It's sure to get plenty of amusing answers.
Serious answer - if the concrete is sound, a Rawlbolt will hold down the Ark Royal, although the bolt head may be unsightly. A Rawlbolt has a wedge device which expands in the hole - try a builders merchant.
As a last resort, for about £500, there is a similar product for undersea oil pipeline installations, a stainless steel bolt with a container of epoxy resin which bursts when tightened up, and will hold an underwater installation in place..... overkill?
Serious answer - if the concrete is sound, a Rawlbolt will hold down the Ark Royal, although the bolt head may be unsightly. A Rawlbolt has a wedge device which expands in the hole - try a builders merchant.
As a last resort, for about £500, there is a similar product for undersea oil pipeline installations, a stainless steel bolt with a container of epoxy resin which bursts when tightened up, and will hold an underwater installation in place..... overkill?