My house was build in '53, so I've got a lot of old cast iron and other original equipment. Yesterday I decided to replace an original (and leaky) toilet. The anchor bolts holding it down were so soft the sheared right off with almost no force from my wrench... made removing the toilet dead simple, but now I'm at a self-inflicted impasse.
After scraping off all the old wax to get a look at things, it was clear the bolts need to be replaced. I made an incorrect assumption that the drain pipe had a run of the mill flange atop it, so started prying it up with a screw driver. The metal is *very* soft and malleable. In no time flat I managed to mangle it beyond recognition.
Anyway, I've come to the conclusion that it was soldered on to the cast iron, or else it's just permanently fused from age. I took a saws-all to it to cut what was the flange gasket/ring off, and now have just a pipe.
Here's where I'm stuck - the top of the pipe is not smooth and level b/c I had to hack off the top. Additionally, it does not protrude above the subfloor.
Can I simply buy a flange anchor that fits inside a 4" pipe, somehow? Or do I need to call a plumber at this point? Something like this, maybe? http://goo.gl/0hmnb
Any help appreciated...
After scraping off all the old wax to get a look at things, it was clear the bolts need to be replaced. I made an incorrect assumption that the drain pipe had a run of the mill flange atop it, so started prying it up with a screw driver. The metal is *very* soft and malleable. In no time flat I managed to mangle it beyond recognition.
Anyway, I've come to the conclusion that it was soldered on to the cast iron, or else it's just permanently fused from age. I took a saws-all to it to cut what was the flange gasket/ring off, and now have just a pipe.
Here's where I'm stuck - the top of the pipe is not smooth and level b/c I had to hack off the top. Additionally, it does not protrude above the subfloor.
Can I simply buy a flange anchor that fits inside a 4" pipe, somehow? Or do I need to call a plumber at this point? Something like this, maybe? http://goo.gl/0hmnb
Any help appreciated...
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