



Sometimes it's the small stuff in a bathroom that causes the biggest headaches. This Hurst, Texas homeowner had an issue that needed more than just a quick fix - the toilet, shut-off valve, and supply line all needed to go.
Here's why that matters. A shut-off valve that doesn't actually shut off is a liability. If something goes wrong - a leak, a burst supply line, an overflow - you need that valve to work immediately. An old or failing valve can turn a minor problem into a flooded bathroom fast. We replaced everything together so nothing was left as a weak link.
The braided stainless supply line is a 3/8" compression fit, which is the right call for a toilet hookup like this. It's flexible enough to route cleanly from the valve to the tank, but durable and resistant to the kind of slow weeping that older plastic lines are known for. Paired with a fresh shut-off valve, the whole water supply side of this toilet is solid now.
The new toilet itself went in clean. Everything was seated, secured, and tested before we called it done. No shortcuts. That's just how we handle toilet installation - whether it's a straightforward swap like this one or something more involved.
If your bathroom plumbing is giving you any kind of trouble - a toilet that runs, a valve that's stiff or corroded, a supply line that looks like it's seen better days - it's worth getting it looked at before it becomes something worse.