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pooping bricks :)
ive learnt that some people cannot flush their toilet bowls by dumping a bucket of (gray)water in there.. so if youd like to save some water.. heres an idea... put 1 or 2 bricks inside your toilet water tank and voila
enjoy |
A shame mine simply would not flush like that. As it is, I've got the top off and I have to add more water to make it flush properly about half the time.
When I get my RV set up, whenever that will be, the gray water tank will be pumped directly into the toilet tank. |
California had a rebate on low flow toilets. Put in a couple of Eco Drakes, 1.28 gal flush and the rebates paid for 3/4 the price of the toilets. Much better flushers than what I had before too.
Now there's actual semi-real testing done on toilets so you can get one that saves water AND still flushes well. |
well since im in an appartment.. i have no intentions of changing my toilet bowl...
well it was just an idea :) |
Hmph. So it ain't just me.
Take that bucket o water and throw it in there straight down the chute- forget the tank. The extra inertia makes 'er go. I make an effort to use a 5 qt ice cream pail of grey water whenever I remember to leave it in the sink to catch it. |
Thanks Frank,
I was wondering how the crapper they had wouldn't flush with gray water. My sis had a cabin without running water for a while and that is the way we flushed. I just couldn't figure out how it wasn't working for them. On a side note, you can gain effectiveness in the pour-flush method if you don't directly hit the chute. It is called building a "head". Pouring off to the side will cause turbulence that will keep the water in the bowl longer, allowing it to fill and create a better siphon on the trap. Pouring directly in causes the trap flow to become turbulent (you dont want this) and it breaks up and pulls a poor siphon (doesn't flush well). good luck. |
wow.. good tip on that one.. i hate seeing chunks of last nights dinner floating about :)
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Be careful if your putting a brick or two in the water tank, some water tanks are not held to the wall very securely. The weight of a couple of bricks could be enough to pull the screws from the wall(Had it happen once).
Another option is to use either a zip-lock bag, or an old plastic paint tin, filled with water, in the tank. |
I put bricks in the tank at my Mom's house many years back, but after 2-3 years they started to crumble (good material, eh?). I cleaned out the tank and put in 1 pint bottles filled with sand and water.
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I have a semi-automated graywater system at my house.
Used laundry water goes through a sandfilter/marshplants, gravity fed into a big rubbermaid trough, and then gets pumped to the toilet with a well pump on a pressure switch. When you flush the toilet, pressurized water starts pumping into it from the graywater tank. It works great. Read more at: Ben's DIY Graywater System - EcoRenovator |
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