If you are talking about a low water level, this usually can be adjusted by insuring the fill line from the ball-cock (fill valve) is not clogged. This runs water into the overflow tube inside your tank and insures there is enough water in the bowl to create a seal and prevent sewer gas from comming up through the water closet. If you want less water in the bowl, this is usually regulated by the manufacturer of the water closet by the height of the "S Trap" molded into the bowl.
15" from floor to rim of bowl on a standard water closet and 18" on a handicap water closest. That means on the 15" standard -you need to be 15" from center of bowl to any side walls. (30" space if enclosed) On a handicap water closet-18" from center of bowl to wall with grab bar. And (36" space if enclosed) grab bar on both sides.
A closet auger! ( Closet is in reference to a water closet or toilet) It can be purchased at most home improvement stores.
The water level in the tank is set by the ballcock, the mechanism with the float that is responsible for turning the water on and off when you flush. The water level in the bowl is set by the height of the top of the S-trap that is part of the bowl. Tank water level is adjustable, bowl water level is not.
it is below grown level have you checked the level of water in the bowl?if it is not up to maximum level the toilet will not flush properly to check that , fill the bowl slowly with water using a bucket or some other container until the level stops rising then mark this level with a pencil . then flush the toilet and let it refill if the level in the bowl is not up to the pencil mark you need to adjust the fill tube flow . there are two screws on top of the valve one for the tank level and the other for the bowl level good luck
He was awarded the first patent for the flushing toilet (or valve closet) in 1775. This new toilet was an improvement of Sir John Harrington's water closet, which was invented in 1596 and used by Queen Elizabeth I. The water closet was able to flush, but did not have a water trap. Cummings' toilet allowed some water to stay in the bowl after flushing because of the "S trap," a sliding valve between the bowl and trap. This excess water kept the house from smelling like sewage and helped to clean the bowl after use. Many other inventors followed Cummings and contributed their ideas to what is now the modern day toilet.
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You can't, the water level in the bowl is a design feature and is set by the way the drain is cast in the base.
In the tank no problem in the actual bowl YOU Cant
YOU DON'TIt is pre determined by the seal of the trapBasically when the toilet is designed the volume of retained water at the bottom of the toilet is calculated so that it stops effluent gasses coming back up the stench pipe in to the toilet and also to stop waste that goes down sticking to the bottom of the bowl.
# Take a bowl half full of water # Take a marker and make a mark on the bowl where the water line is. # Let the bowl of water sit out for a couple nights # You will see the water level dip below the line you drew on the side of the bowl
That device is called the refill tube. This allows water to go down the overflow tube to refill the water closet bowl while the tank is filling.
On some toilets there is not a significant amount of adjustment (for the water in the bowl), but try this... inside your tank there is a tube that flows into the overflow pipe, assuring that this tube is putting water down that pipe will assure that you are getting the amount designed by the equipment in the tank. Some of this equipment have flow valves... but most do not. The maximum amount of water in the bowl is determined by its design in relation to the trap built into the toilet.