Is your toilet always running? Does it seem like it flushes automatically? Have you looked everywhere, but found no signs of leakage? Have you assessed the tank flapper? Is it working just fine? The sound of your toilet always running isn’t just annoying, but also wastes water and works against a long life for your plumbing. Is there leakage in your toilet bowl?
Could The Toilet Flapper Be The Problem?
Toilets are built with flappers to seal water getting into the tank. The flapper lifts whenever a toilet is flushed, allowing water to flow into the bowl from the tank. The flapper then falls back to its initial position the moment water in the tank reaches a certain level, re-sealing it.
If a flapper builds up sediment or becomes brittle, your toilet will appear to randomly auto flush. When this happens, the flapper fails to fully seal water in the tank. As a result, water flows slowly into the bowl from the tank in drips. When an sufficient amount of water leaves the tank into the bowl, the vacuum triggers the filling mechanism to refill the tank. However, enough water in the toilet bowl triggers the self-siphoning mechanism, causing the bowl to drain its contents into the sewerage system.
Other Possible Causes Of A Constantly Running Toilet
How To Assess Flapper Leakage
The presence of colored water in your bowl is an indication that your flapper is leaking.
However, the problem could be on the supply side of the system. Temporarily lower the level to prevent the colored water from going through the overflow in case the issue is coming from the supply letting in water, meaning no leakage.
How To Fix A Leaky Toilet Flapper