This is what happens when I get drunk alone.
1/4/2009 10:09:58 PM
hey, it all comes from (and goes to) the same place. No problem with that.
1/4/2009 10:13:33 PM
I'm not entirely sure Tech Talk is the right place for this thread
1/4/2009 10:20:17 PM
I don't know, I've read plenty of crap in this section in the past.Did I mention that it runs through my water-cooling rig?Oh, I should explain that bottle on the left. It's called soap. Some people use it on a daily basis.
1/4/2009 10:53:32 PM
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1/4/2009 11:29:00 PM
this is pretty smart. i'm assuming the aim was to save water from washing hands after using the toilet?
1/5/2009 12:22:32 AM
good job captain planet
1/5/2009 12:24:55 AM
I read that this is how all toilets in Japan are.
1/5/2009 12:26:11 AM
Well, it's how most western style toilets are in Japan(the rest are just holes in the floor). Cheapest thing I could find here in the states was $100. Seems to me it's the type of thing that should come standard.(along with british-style siphon valves, toilet fails altogether instead of just leaking for months) if Americans are really concerned with this sort of thing.-----------------------Here's my new idea though. What if the above product had a button that pressed down on the fill valve float below it? Then the sink wouldn't just be timed, and could be used as an actual sink.I've yet to see how the soap affects the life of the flapper(or siphon diaphragm, in the european case).Also, the lip around the flapper prevents the last half inch of water from draining from the tank, which is why toilets on well water collect mud down there.One more problem is that without the full pressure of that little hose, the toilet bowl doesn't rinse as well. The hole in the sink drains into the fill tube, but it has zero pressure. Of course, conventional home toilets are pretty stupid anyway, since you take line pressure (20+ psi?) fill a tank six inches above the bowl, and let only gravity do the flushing.[Edited on January 5, 2009 at 12:46 AM. Reason : .]
1/5/2009 12:34:03 AM
Tokyo Airport
1/5/2009 4:06:42 AM
1/5/2009 4:09:19 AM
wolfwebbers never cease to amaze me with how little they have going on in their lives.
1/5/2009 7:13:09 AM
BobbyDigital never ceases to amaze me with how much time he spends putting down other wolfwebbers because he thinks he is far superior.
1/5/2009 7:23:42 AM
1/5/2009 10:01:01 AM
Nice little setup. Makes perfect sense. It'd be a little weird having to straddle the toilet to wash your hands, though.In using it, is that enough water to actually get the soap off your hands? Seems like that little stream wouldn't be all that effective. But I guess a lot of water flows through it, so it might just take a few seconds longer than the regular sink...
1/5/2009 10:09:47 AM
1/5/2009 10:36:13 AM
My own quote:
1/5/2009 11:16:44 AM
1/5/2009 12:32:09 PM
1/5/2009 2:36:00 PM
You just described a conventional gravity fed toilet:That little hole has been a standard feature for decades, as far as I know.What you were probably thinking of is a pressure assisted toilet, usually found in low traffic commercial buildings:I've yet to see one in a home(they're very loud), but then again I have poor acquaintances.
1/5/2009 4:59:18 PM
well i live in an apartment complex built in 97, id love to have the small holei clog that trailer toilet every time
1/5/2009 7:09:01 PM
1/5/2009 11:42:54 PM
1/6/2009 8:59:20 AM
^^^ Cadet III Toilet. The one with a 10/10 rating at Home Depot. Its gets the job done every time for $150
1/6/2009 9:24:43 PM
^+1I just ordered one of those sinks for my cadet 3
1/7/2009 1:17:46 AM