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mm mm is offline
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Default How much of a toilet's power....

On Thu, 3 Feb 2011 22:22:02 -0500, "Robert Green"
wrote:

"Jeff Thies" wrote in message
...
On 2/3/2011 12:59 PM, Bob Villa wrote:
On Feb 3, 10:22 am, wrote:
Bob Villa wrote:
On Feb 3, 8:55 am, "Robert wrote:
wrote in message

...

....comes from the water stored in the tank, vs the incoming water
pressure? I'm referring to an old style toilet, not some dubious
low flush annoy-o-lator.

Anything with a tank is gravity powered. Incoming water, AFAIK, has
nothing to do with flushing, just refilling the tank. I'll bet those
old "Godfather I" type toilets with the ceiling-high tank could
flush a bag of golf balls. Some tankless toilets run off water
pressure, but I've not seen them (here comes the flood of those that
have!) in anything but commercial structures.

--
Bobby G.

I doubt the height added pressure...it's not like it was the depth of
the water, it was just falling farther.

height does add pressure. there's that gravity thing increasing the

speed of
the falling water.

The water can only fall at a certain speed though a given
diameter...no matter what height.


Actually, the calculations are widely available as they are used in
irrigation, amongst other applications. There is not a lot of head loss
for that large a pipe. Velocity being a factor of pressure, area and
resistance. The restrictions largely seem to be in the toilet itself,
not the water column.


So are you saying that the high tank doesn't help? Like Bob, I'm not
sure. If not, why did they use it? Why did the drug dealers buy
them?

I think the key is a direct path to flush the effluent rather filling
up the bowl. In a poorly designed toilet the bowl will fill and that
height of water in the bowl will push out the waste. Sort of like tuning
exhaust lines in a car.

Jeff


And a new job category is created: Commode customizing toilet tuner!


I used to live upstairs from a pipe organ tuner. I should tell him
about this new opportunity.