1- evaporation
2- Capillary action
3- poor venting
4- Negative pressure
5- Positive pressure
6- evaporation
7- Oscillation
8- crack
9- stoppage down stream
A toilet that slowly looses all of the water out of the tank or bowl when it has not been used for a log time is experiencing a condition that renders the toilet almost unusable. When you flush a toilet, the water in both the tank and the bowl empty out, only to be immediately replenished with fresh water.
alliedallcityinc.com
Please don't tell me you already dropped a deuce in there after you bought it and before you hooked it up to the water supply. :O
Certainly, as long as, all the solids are removed during the flush.
yes you can but you would have to clean it with toilet bowl cleaner
toilet cleaner, or Windex if it is the outside of the toilet bowl.
30 inches.
You would need to pour the water into the bowl.
If there are urine stains in your toilet bowl, pour a generous amount of bleach into the toilet bowl and under the rim, then leave overnight. The next morning, flush the toilet and pour more bleach into the bowl and scrub with a toilet brush.
a strawberry can, u cant shake a toilet bowl.
it was usually wood or if you were rich you could have one made out of lime stone and it was basically a little bowl with a hole and every few days they would empty it onto the fields as fertilizer
Unless you plan on washing your hands and brushing your teeth in the toilet bowl, it would seem appropriate.
Yes, toilet bowl cleaner is very corrosive
The flushing toilet was invented by John Harrington in 1596. he was English so the toilet bowl was invented in England.
2" or 3" integral trap built into toilet bowl.