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Jeff Thies Jeff Thies is offline
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Default Better low-flush toilets

On 12/9/2010 3:17 AM, harry wrote:
On Dec 9, 4:59 am, wrote:
On Dec 8, 4:44 pm, Jeff wrote:





On 12/8/2010 2:12 PM, David Nebenzahl wrote:


Having just replaced a toilet for a friend yesterday, just wanted to
plop in my observations here for those who might be looking to do the same.


The toilet being replaced was a low-flush one, not very old, but in a
basement bath with a history of clogging problems. So my friend got a
new low-flush unit which was supposed to be much better at disposing of
waste. When I got a look at the tank I could see why: instead of the
normal outlet and flapper, this one had a 4" opening, significantly
larger. Which means that the water whooshes into the toilet a lot faster.


We'll see if it makes a difference.


I don't remember the make, but he got it at Home Despot, so I assume
it's available pretty much anywhere.


One weird thing, though: instead of being at the bottom of the tank like
you'd expect, the flapper sits a couple of inches up on an extension.


More gravity working for you. Water height.


Got a Kohlar Cimmaron 1.28 here (literally). Beats the pants off my old
toilet. Never clogs. Flushes super quick. Amazing.


Jeff


This is obviously by design. Seems strange to leave that much water in
the bottom of the tank; there must be some reason for this.
(Hydrodynamics?)


I recently installed a 1.28 gpf American Standard toilet. 3 inch
flapper, large siphon hole. Flapper sits pretty much on the bottom of
the tank.

It flushes great, but I've got a concern about what happens after the
waste leaves the bowl.

We get roots in our pipes and end up with partial blockages and
gurgling toilets once every year or so. $35 to rent a 100 foot snake
clears the problem. The money is nothing, it's the pick-up, clean-up
(yuck!) and drop off that's a pain.

Anyway, my concern is that with 20% less water moving waste through
the pipe I'm going to get blockages sooner since things won't be
moving along quite as quickly and could get caught sooner.

What I save on water will be dwarfed by what it'll cost to replace the
sewer pipe to eliminate the problem.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


It's the roots that's the problem, not the toilet.


I killed mine with, I believe, some kind of copper sulphate solution.
Googling for root killer I ran across this:

http://www.rex-bac-t.com/p-23-rootx-...FYGW7QodSkui0w

Something like that may be worth a try.

Jeff