Hi Everyone,
Help please. There is a photo below so it is clear what I am describing in case I use the wrong terminology.
When I flush my toilet (which is about 15 years old), the water will flush in the normal manner, and water commence filling up the tank. The black "float" in the toilet will rise as the water fills the tank, and the lever also moves upwards. All good so far.
If I manually raise the lever to the full upwards position, it must seal a valve or something because water will stop filling the tank.
However, before the water reaches the height necessary for the black float to rise far enough so that the lever will stop the water from filling the tank on its own, without me pulling it up, the water starts to run into the holes in the white "over flow" pipe. This is a round pipe in the tank, and before the top of the pipe there are 2 holes. I presume this is there so the tank cannot overfill, because the water that runs through the pipe dribbles down the back of the toilet into the bowl. Hence the toilet never stops filling/emptying if I don't manually raise the lever. If I just block these holes with my fingers, then the water cannot escape, and the tank level continues to rise and the black float rises a little more and the lever goes up and the water will stop running.
It is almost as though the white pipe is just set a little too low in the toilet, but the toilet never used to leak like this so then I think maybe something has stretched or there is another issue for the distances just being a little out? I am tempted just to permanently plug the holes in the white pipe to fix the problem (because water can still flow over the top of the pipe to prevent an overflow situation, so the side holes seem unnecessary) but I just wanted to check before I did so in case there was another way to fix the issue or a good reason for these holes?
Community manager's note: Check out How to fix a leaking toilet for expert advice.
