Household Hints & Help
Related: About this forumToilet malfunction in our half bath downstairs, sometimes...
Sometimes everything goes down, some times it doesn't...we are puzzled. We have a plumber and he is puzzled. Our upstairs toilet, in our full bath, nothing fancy, works every time, no problem.
Replacing the toilet is just too expensive right now. Our plumber warranteed his work for a full year so for a whole year he could come to our house every week and we wouldn't be charged any extra. But it's a PITA having to call him and have him check it out. Plus it is disconcerting not to be sure that flush is gonna do the job!
Add to this the fact that we are both in our 80s and trudging up and down stairs just to go use the toilet is wearing us down.
Any suggestions are welcome!

c-rational
(3,079 posts)drain to make sure there isn't a small blockage. Does the bowl fill too quickly and discharge slowly? Watch each toilet flush clean and note any diffference. This all assumes both are the same type.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)doesn't make it down and floats back up.
SheltieLover
(72,151 posts)Put a small bucket in bathroom & dump water into bowl as soon as you flush.
I hope this helps.
c-rational
(3,079 posts)toilet tank. If that is the case, it could be low pressure. Should bbe better on the ground floor unless a supply line is reduced due to deposits due to limited use.
bucolic_frolic
(51,623 posts)CTyankee
(66,658 posts)We love the house. It has its own outstanding beauty and these houses are treasured in New Haven. We don't know when the half bath was added; or even if it was in the original to begin with.
He didn't snake it last time. Should I suggest he do that?
bucolic_frolic
(51,623 posts)I'm not a plumber, but it could be a clog in the drain pipe (so he would snake it with a long flexible steel coil), or a clog in the air vent stack. In some local codes at earlier times the air vents were installed differently than roof to basement, for example just roof to drain stack. It can be hard to diagnose.
KPN
(16,799 posts)rim that can affect the flush. Weak flushes are not uncommon in old toilets. If you can't replace it, you might try the things discussed at this link:
https://www.fluidmaster.com/toilet-problems/weak-toilet-flush/#:~:text=Toilets%20that%20have%20been%20in,a%20weak%20or%20incomplete%20flush.
Hope this helps and good luck.
ps -- If all fails and don't have the ability to replace it with a new toilet, let us know. I'd be more than happy to make a contribution to you to get that taken care of. I'm 74. If I had two stories, I'd definitely want -- and I'm sure some day in the not too distant future would need -- an operable toilet on my first floor for sure.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)his work and I'll bet he doesn't think that includes a new toilet. He'll give up and claim it's just a bad toilet and he did all he could do and goodbye.
KPN
(16,799 posts)little more detail than the one I posted above:
https://westernrooter.com/how-to-fix-a-toilet-that-wont-flush-but-isnt-clogged-expert-guide/
I'm assumning the toilet isn't new. Ask the plumber to check the rim outlets and jets for blockage next time he looks at it for you.
bucolic_frolic
(51,623 posts)Will be cleaning the holes ... lots of iron in system here.
jmowreader
(52,558 posts)If it's new, buy a two-pack of toilet bowl cleaner. Pour one entire bottle of it into the bowl and let it sit 12 hours. Scrub out the toilet (especially the trap) and let it sit for another 12 hours, then flush and repeat. Lime can build up inside the toilet and make it less efficient.
If it's been going on since you bought the house, it's possible the drain on the toilet is below the sewer pipe for it. There are two fixes for that: install a vacuum toilet or turn the bathroom into another closet.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)This problem started a few months ago. It was fixed, then it happened again, fixed, started again, etc, etc. I will go over the info provided here with a link to an article I printed out. When the plumber comes I will talk with him about the findings here and find out if he has just been missing the problem all along. But he warranteed his work for a year and if he has to do what the article says must be done, then that will probably take care of it. I have spent $700 on this toilet with just this one incident alone and have no more money to do anything else!
jmowreader
(52,558 posts)If this has just started then something's stuck in there. Try the bowl cleaner first because it's cheap and easy. If that doesn't work then pull the commode, snake the drain with a toilet snake - which in this case is not a synonym for Donald Trump - and reinstall the commode with new bolts because the old ones always shear off. If that doesn't work roots growing into the drain pipe might be the cause.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)Every bit of info from this thread will be shared with the plumber. We will solve this problem once and for all!
anciano
(1,910 posts)A friend of ours recently had a similar problem that was caused by tree roots that had grown into the drain line.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)bamagal62
(4,043 posts)Down and see whats up.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)IbogaProject
(4,724 posts)Some times the toilet paper can form something like paper-mache up inside the flow inside of the actual commode, where it kind of goes up and over right before it goes into the hole in the floor. you fill the bucket with 1.5 to 2 gallons of warm or hot water, pour that in and then flush immediately. It might take two times. There are also enzymes that help with the cellulose in the paper to get it broken up. Enzymes are best with municipal but not recommended with septic system.
CTyankee
(66,658 posts)I will keep this in mind in case this happens again. He has honor his warranty, but I bet he regrets it now!
IbogaProject
(4,724 posts)I learned the bucket part from an old article.