EPaulikonis
Well-known member
I have a 2015 Landmark Savannah with a damaged closet flange. Does anyone know if it's a glued ABS or a threaded piece?
Can you post a picture of what you are looking at ?
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
The toilet flange is, absolutely, glued to the ABS pipe leading to the black tank. The flange is then screwed to the floor. This keeps the toilet from moving when it is attached to the flange via toilet bolts. The best was to replace the flange is cut the pipe, if it is accessible, behind basement wall. Get a new piece of 3 ABS pipe. Glue new flange to new pipe. Attach new pipe to existing pipe with no-hub coupler. Youll only going to need maybe 6 to 8 of new pipe. Screw new flange to floor. Theres nothing special about RV toilet flanges. They use the same flange as in your home
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
I have a 2015 Landmark Savannah with a damaged closet flange. Does anyone know if it's a glued ABS or a threaded piece?
It is glued. We just replaced the one in the front bath at the end of June this year. The black pipe in the basement had to be cut, install a joint then a piece of black pipe cut off from the piece that was took out, then a new 45 elbow, then piece of pipe from black pipe and then the new flange. Took less than a hour total.
I am quite relieved to find out I am not the only one who had drunken monkeys and their cousins assembling this RV. I show people pictures of stuff I have found and see jaws drop everytime. I texted a picture of my ceiling light wiring on my slide to a house builder friend of mine (they just left the pigtails dangle in the fiberglass insulation). He said "I don't believe that is code." I said well code is more like a suggestion when it comes to RV's.I had to replace the toilet flange on our front toilet about a month ago also. I found pretty much the same thing David did. I had previously tried a repair flange that slides into the pipe with a rubber seal and tightens down. That only lasted for a month and the toilet was wobbly again.
The main problem with mine was the toilet was installed by the same drunk monkeys that installed the wiring in ParkIt's rig. (See basement wall question thread). Actually I am pretty sure my whole rig was built by drunken monkeys and their cousins, but i wont go into that now.
The flange was glued to the pipe bellow crooked, so they tried to pull it straight by over tightening the screws which just destroyed the floor board.
After removing the basement wall, access to the pipe was easy.
I took a picture of the pipe and went to the local plumbing supply to get the parts i needed. The parts are also available at the large building supply stores, i am sure much cheaper than buying from Heartland.
I cut the pipe down low to give myself plenty of room to work.
The flange assembly i purchased has a metal flange for the closet bolts to attach to. Since the floor was not solid i purchased 4" stainless bolts that go through the flange all the way through the floor. I also put a metal repair flange underneath to give more strength.
I then glued the pipe pieces in place. I also installed a cleanout in the pipe, a hold over from doing commercial building plumbing i guess.
The toilet was unstable when we got the rig new, but now it is solid.
The connection into the top of the tank is rubber to accommodate flexing as you go down the road.
Hope this helps.
Sherman