kalmar wrote:
Are you sure the toilet is on the cold mains rather than the cold storage tank?
Yup, we have no cold or hot water storage. The previous owner removed the airing cupboard (to turn it into an ensuite... yes, really) and retrofitted a combi boiler, and all cold plumbing in the house is directly mains fed now. I can see the feed pipe running from the stop cock in the kitchen and into a boxed-off corner alongside the sewer downpipe, running to the bathroom directly above.
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If it's the mains, get the water switched off properly.
I had a quick look for the external stop cock earlier but couldn't find it. I might give my neighbour a knock and ask him if he knows where it is tomorrow.
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The valve is probably just a bit siezed so work it open and closed a few times and get a wrench onto the handle to give it a bit of extra help.
Well, I dunno. The tap was a little stiff at first but I freed it off enough to turn by hand through about half a dozen turns. It really does feel like it's bottomed out at the end of the travel. It might be worth a try though.
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Even if it still flows a bit, leave a downstairs tap on (if your toilet is upstairs) and this will prevent water coming out upstairs.
Yeah, I thought of that, but there's still a bit of pressure in the upstairs taps. I've also been looking at pipe freezing kits -- they claim to be able to keep a narrow gauge feed pipe frozen for 20 min, which is probably enough to change the toilet fitting... although the toilet isn't really the bigger problem now, the stop cock is.
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Then dismantle the toilet fitting and see what's what. PTFE tape as you said, or if it's where it seals on to the cictern apply some silicone and then put it together again.
As I loosened the copper nut off the plastic pipe a little -- only about 15 degrees or so -- I started to get water escaping the joint under pressure. I strongly suspect the plastic pipe is cracked and only being held together by the copper nut. Ideally, I need to replace that part. I don't think scilicone will work unless I can dry the joint out.
kalmar wrote:
Oh, also, slightly silly question but are you sure it's actually leaking? With the cold weather recently my toilet cistern has some condensation on it and that's starting to run down the pipe which does look like it's leaking.
Well, I might be under-selling it as a "drip"; it's losing about a pint a day!