Jacuzzi Bath Era BK37 959 White toilet bowl and tank Logo
Posted on Apr 21, 2011
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Very slow refill on tank. How to adjust? - Jacuzzi Bath Era BK37 959 White toilet bowl and tank

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Curtis Sewell

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  • Master 7,482 Answers
  • Posted on Apr 22, 2011
Curtis Sewell
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Hi carlson33 19...

I would say your fill valve (ballcock) has trash in it or needs to be replaced because of age.

If you replace it you can get the "ballcock" from just about any hardware supply,Home Depot,Lowes...etc.. and I would recommend the replacement of the "flapper valve" also at the same time.
All the instructions for adjusting are on the package of the ballcock...
This should solve your problem.
Free Answer...Please rate me

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tip

How to adjust a toilet

  • Your toilet tank may simply need a good "tune-up." Here are some adjustments you can make.

  • Refill valve. If your tank has a conventional ballcock refill valve, the water level is adjusted by bending the float arm. The level should be high enough for complete flushes, but the water should not be to the top of the overflow pipe. Your tank should have a colored or molded water level mark. It should never be set so low that the bowl does not refill with trap sealing water. The rule of thumb is to set the water level about 3/4" below the top of the overflow pipe.

  • If the float rubs on other parts, simply adjust the float arm sideways. If the float lacks buoyancy, unscrew then shake it to determine if it is waterlogged. A waterlogged float should be replaced. The float arm can also be replaced, if needed.

  • In tanks using modern plastic refill valves, the tank water level is adjusted in other ways. If your tank uses a hand nut, turn the nut clockwise to raise, or counterclockwise to lower, the water level. Or, your tank may have a sliding pinch clamp on an adjustment rod.

  • Flush valve. Replacements for a flush ball and its actuating mechanism are available, but it may be possible to stop a leak with minor adjustments. Check the following mechanisms before purchasing replacements.

  • See that the guide arm is centered directly over the seat. The guide arm should drop the flush ball directly into its seat. If the flush ball is not seating properly, make the adjustment shown.

  • The guide arm should allow the flush ball to rise enough for a complete flush. If not, raise the arm. Be careful that it isn't too high–then it will prevent the ball from closing completely.

  • Check that the upper lift wire pulls the flush ball high enough. To adjust it, simply bend the wire for a higher or lower lift.

  • The lifting hardware on a flapper-type flush valve should raise the rubber flapper to start a flush, but should not hold the flapper up off its seat. If this is occurring, the hardware is adjusted too short. Some types allow you to slide the flapper itself up or down on the refill tube to ensure that the flapper meets the valve seat squarely. The lifting hardware and flapper height adjustments are the first things to check when flapper problems arise.

  • Refill tube. If the bowl-refill tube is out of place, water is routed directly into the tank, rather than replenishing water in the bowl. When this is the case, you will likely hear splashing sounds during tank refill. The refill tube should aim directly into the overflow pipe but should not reach below water level. If the tube extends too low, it will siphon tank water silently away. Fix it by repositioning as shown.

  • Defective refill tubes on some valves can be replaced with new plastic ones. Simply place one end of the plastic tube over the serrated plastic lug on the body of the valve, and place the plastic holder in the top of the overflow pipe.
  • on Jan 16, 2010 • Plumbing
    0helpful
    1answer

    Hard to refill gas tank have to pump real slow car runs fine

    You've got your gas tank presure release valve.stuck or no good
    0helpful
    1answer

    How do I get the water to stop filling the tank on my toto ST794S toilet?

    there should be a screw adjustment on the ballcock or fill assembly...screw that down some to adjust...that regulates your tank water level....that screw goes in or out to adjust...one or other should do the trick...may have to do this a few times to get proper adjustment...good luck..
    0helpful
    1answer

    How do I adjust the pressure in a Kohler pressurized flush toilet

    You cannot adjust the pressure on the toilet. But you can adjust the stop setting screw at the top of the float arm. If the water is coming in too fast you can adjust the valve where the toilet water line connects to the wall water supply. Closing the valve a little will slow down the flow of water and it will take a little longer to refill the toilet water tank.
    0helpful
    1answer

    When the tank refills, the amount of water that is

    The fill level can be adjusted by either lowering the filler valve column or bending the filler arm down. The adjustment method is dependent on the type of filler valve. Be cautious not to allow the fill level to go above the designated fill line.
    0helpful
    1answer

    Every 10 minutes or so my toilet tank refills. Ho...

    You have a small leak at the flapper, it goes down till the filler goes on and fills it back up. A new flapper or maybe just a small adjustment will seal it up. Check it out.
    May 20, 2010 • Home
    0helpful
    1answer

    My dual flush toilet fills up slowly how do i fix

    Lift the tank lid off, place it somewhere safe for a moment, and look at what happens: If you're talking about jiggling the handle to get the tank to start to fill with water, then it sounds like the chain or rope is out of adjustment. It can't be TOO TIGHT or the water will leak past your flapper (will cause your dripping noise, tank water level will leak down, causing constant refills), and it cant be TOO LOOSE or the toilet won't flush correctly. Since you didn't mention trouble flushing the toilet, I think that it may be a little too TIGHT. When you jiggle the flush lever-it is supposed to pull a chain or cable to open the flapper at the bottom of the tank. Flush the tank and watch what happens-all the way through to refilling the tank with water and shutting off the water refill valve-Does the flapper get stuck on the chain or something? It is supposed to fall back down to allow the tank to refill after flushing out your toilet. Does the chain look very loose? The dripping sound you described indicates that the flapper is not sealing 100%. The flapper is very easy to replace, you just have to get the adjustment set for when you flush the toilet how sensitive you need it. You amy have to play with it a little bit before you get the adjustment correct.

    Hope this helps!
    Nov 08, 2009 • Home
    0helpful
    1answer

    After flushing, water does not refill the tank.

    yeah sounds as though the ball valve or water inlet valve is stuck in the closed position or jammed so when you flush the loo the water doesnt refill.
    Isolate water service remove valve as required clean/replace re instate test & leave working
    2helpful
    1answer

    Toilet tank is refilling slowly.

    Hi AaronYC,

    I'm Harvey the Master Plumbe.

    Your problem is: Installed a new American Standard Cadet 3 toilet bowl and tank at home. When you turn the water supply on, the tank refills normally and stops normally. After you flush, the refill is very slow. When it refills normally the water comes out from the bottom of the pipe (i.e. the pipe that houses the float cup) and when it is refilling slowly, it comes from the top of the pipe. Sometimes (but not always), you can shut the water supply off and when you turn it back on, the flow of water goes from slow to fast instantly - but you haven't been able to recreate this consistently.

    These are the facts. American Standard has been keeping costs down by out sourceing. Their toilets are now built in third world countries and parts are made cheap. They're all doing it. Quality control is pretty good but your toilet came with a bad "ballcock". That's the refill part on the left. Because it's new, if you take the ball **** back to place of purchase they should give you new. If not, they cost less than $ 10.00 and easy to replace.

    Feel free contact me again!
    Please give me a rating here at fixya.com before you sign off
    Thank you,
    Harvey your Master Plumber
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