DIY: Toilet Fill Valve Seal Repair

updat­ed 8/7/2022

What: Kohler High­line Clas­sic K‑11499–0 (bought and installed May 2017) toi­let fill valve (Flu­id­mas­ter Uni­ver­sal 400A OE part — came with toi­let) issues

Prob­lem: Months of slow-fill­ing toi­let along with a loud squeal noise when float rais­es with water lev­el. It final­ly quit fill­ing alto­geth­er.

When: August 2022

Sup­plies: 242 Toi­let Replace­ment Seal, a cup

Cost: Around $4 and gas

Time: 10 min­utes

Dif­fi­cul­ty: Easy

Process

1. Turn off the water sup­ply (bath­room got a nice clean­ing after this)

2. Grab the fill valve cap and twist left to unseat it (you might have to grab the stem of the whole valve to pre­vent the entire valve from spin­ning. Here’s a video)

3. Now to unhook the cap from the float. Give it a nice, care­ful tug, being aware that it is plas­tic.

4. Exam­ine the fill valve seal for debris. Remove it care­ful­ly and inspect under­neath for debris. Clean it out. In my case, there was debris under­neath that was caus­ing a block­age and there­fore no water. It must have been there for a while and then final­ly occlud­ed the open­ing.

5. Sim­i­lar­ly, inspect the cap-less top of the fill valve for debris.

Looks clear to me! But just in case…

6. Now that every­thing is off, let’s go ahead and flush the fill valve itself. Appar­ent­ly, over the years pieces of Teflon tape, or min­er­als or oth­er debris can accu­mu­late in the valve. Flu­id­mas­ter sets the lifes­pan of a fill valve at around 7 years (mine is about 5 years old). SO, grab a cup and place it upside-down over the fill valve.

7. Turn on the water sup­ply and flush for about 10–15 sec­onds (accord­ing to Flu­id­mas­ter)

8. At this point, you would replace every­thing and test it out. It was no longer fill­ing slow­ly after the debris was removed, so BOOM, solved. BUT…the float mech­a­nism no longer worked…as in, the fill valve kept fill­ing with­out stop­ping. Oh, great. I bust­ed it some­how. Removed every­thing again and found that the orig­i­nal seal looked kind of chewed up around the float pin.

9. Turned the water sup­ply back off, and ran out to the store to grab a 242 Toi­let Fill Valve Seal (and oth­er stuff just in case, so I would­n’t have to run out again, but did­n’t need them in the end)

10. Had remove it all again and here is an image of the old seal. If you look at the cen­ter, you can see how rough it looks where I tried to push it in with my fin­ger­nails and prob­a­bly from gen­er­al wear and tear

11. Here’s a side by side of the old seal and the new one

12. Slide the seal onto the cap

13. Now to reassem­ble it all. Line up the cap assem­bly with the float assem­bly stem groove and snap it in

*snap*

14. Place the now-attached cap back on the valve. Remem­ber that you have to turn right to replace it, so place the cap accord­ing­ly so that none of the parts inter­fere with each oth­er

*Let’s twist again! Like we did last sum­mer!*

15. Twist it to the right and, YAY, it’s back on!

Reassem­bled!

16. MOMENT OF TRUTH. Turn on the water sup­ply. You should imme­di­ate­ly hear the water fill­ing up. Now lift up on the float mech­a­nism. If the tank quits fill­ing, you are DONE, and it is REPAIRED! GREAT JOB!

Lift up on the float and BOOM! Hal­lelu­jah!

DIY Simple Dog Urine Collection Stick (No Bending Down!)

Writ­ten June 2022, updat­ed 7/2024

What

Pole for col­lect­ing dog urine for sam­pling

Sup­plies

Any stick or pole, hose clamps, col­lec­tion con­tain­er, screw­driv­er

Time

10 Min­utes

Mate­ri­als Used

  • 25–38mm Hose Clamp (x2)
  • 10–16mm Hose Clamp (x1)
  • 48 in x ⁷⁄₁₆ in (L x W) Gar­den Stake (x1)
  • Ster­ile Col­lec­tion Cup (x1)

Cost

ItemAmount
48in Pow­der Coat­ed Met­al Gar­den Stake$2.33 (1 qty)
60 pc Assort­ed Hose Clamp Kit$12.99 (1 kit)
Ster­ile Col­lec­tion Cup$7.99 (5 qty)
Total$23.31
Total per Col­lec­tion Stick$4.59

Process

  • Make a ring to place the col­lec­tion cup in with­out it falling through all the way
  • Use a small­er clamp to con­nect the pole to the large ring
  • Place col­lec­tion con­tain­er of your choice into ring
  • Make sure your pet isn’t afraid of it before using to col­lect

    Notes

    • Used a plas­tic gar­den stake because: it’s rigid, has ridges on there to pre­vent the clamp from shift­ing, easy to clean, resist rust with plas­tic coat­ing
    • Any width gar­den stake or pole can be used. I just hap­pened to have the ⁷⁄₁₆ inch one
    • The largest hose clamp avail­able was the 25–38mm, but the nice thing about them is that you can just con­nect small­er ones togeth­er (by feed­ing the ends into the neigh­bor­ing tight­en­er) to make a larg­er one
    • Adding a non-slip han­dle is as easy as wrap­ping vet wrap which can there­fore be changed out when you want to. Or what­ev­er you want to wrap it with