When toilets try to save money by reducing the amount of water they use per flush, but you end up having to flush like 3 times 🤬

  • @JigglySackles@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    ITT, people who didn’t read before posting and people assuming that because their anecdotal evidence is true for them it’s true for everyone. Sheesh. I’ve had some terrible low flow experiences as well but thankfully not in many years. If bringing it up to the landlord does nothing to resolve the issue maybe try to look for a better place eventually. That sucks in the meantime though. A shitty shitter is the worst.

  • @ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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    148 days ago

    Half as Interesting has a video about low flow toilets. When the US passed the 1992 regulation limiting the amount of water a toilet could use, manufacturers rushed to meet the regulation and their designs were terrible. That’s mostly because the quality tests they had to pass were also out of date. Testing standards eventually updated and by 2003 low flow toilets were flushing better than old models with a fraction of the water. More recent models flush even better.

    So OP’s complaint about low flow toilets hasn’t been true for 22 years.

    • @dyslexicdainbroner@lemmy.world
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      37 days ago

      When that legislation passed in 1992, Humor editorialist Dave Berry wrote a column complaining about it and said: “ What would happen if one was to have a particularly large - ummm - Movement of Congress…”

    • @PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.caOP
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      78 days ago

      My toilet is newer than that (and also I don’t live in the USA), so idk what to tell you.
      It could just be a poor toilet (I didn’t buy it), or a plumbing issue (I live in an apartment), but if I flush once then stuff comes back up, and simply using more water fixes it so i assume it’s a flow issue

  • @PassingThrough@lemm.ee
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    98 days ago

    Some low flow models are created so that you just press it to run enough water to down a piss, but hold it to unleash all the stored water to down anything more. That was the point of them, save water by fixing the obvious problem of downing a tank of water over a little urine. But unless you bought the toilet or were told, you don’t know that, and that’s where a lot of the issue comes from. Same interface as any other, different expected input and results.

    On the other hand, I once had an old toilet that did require multiple flushes. It was not a low flow, and there was nothing wrong with the toilet. Years of accumulation had restricted the plumbing like 30 feet down. Plumber eventually sorted that out.

    • @PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.caOP
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      48 days ago

      Honestly this might not be low flow, it could just be poor design. Or like you said, a plumbing problem.

      Even when it doesn’t get clogged (which it often does), stuff will often come back up if I don’t flush twice. Since more water seemed to be the solution, I assumed the problem was low flow.

  • @Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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    88 days ago

    I watched a hai video about the topic and there are some low flow toiles capable of flushing 2 pounds of poo in one flush, maybe who sold your unit didn’t know (or pretended to don’t know) that there’s a poo flushing power for each model, sold you a bad one

          • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            thanks for your patience, i had to look it up some jargon because i wasn’t sure. it’s a niagara flapperless toilet. tip-bucket style. rather than have a full tank all the time, there’s a bucket of full water sitting 2/3 up the tank. you turn the handle, it dumps the the bucket. the flapper gets removed. saves a shitton of water. the force of the bucket of water moves the turds. I was pleasantly surprised it actually works.

            • @PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.caOP
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              16 days ago

              That sounds like a great invention that my toilet unfortunately doesn’t have - and although I know how the mechanisms in my toilet work I’m unfortunately not enough of an experience to retrofit something like that in lol

              But it’s something I’ll keep an eye out for when I eventually buy a house, assuming that ever happens lol

      • @papalonian@lemmy.world
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        48 days ago

        There are cheap, easily removable and attachable bidets you can get and install on any toilet. Takes literally 15 minutes and a crescent wrench, if it doesn’t come with a little tool.

  • @ccunning@lemmy.world
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    38 days ago

    My “low flow” toilet is enough to give Jonah flop-sweats…

    From the US, this comment feels three decades behind the times…

    • HobbitFoot
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      28 days ago

      People don’t normally purchase toilets to stay on top of technology.

      The current state of the art for toilets are that they have a decent metric modeling shit and they have improved a lot in that metric. However, few people buy new toilets.

  • @Sergio@slrpnk.net
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    38 days ago

    Something to try: keep a bucket of water nearby for those “difficult” flushing situations. If you really want conservation points, fill the bucket with your shower run-off.

  • @MrNesser@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    I’m 100% convinced my gym didn’t connect the high flow part of the flush so you have to use the low flow

    • @PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.caOP
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      38 days ago

      I don’t understand how a hose would fix the issue better than flushing. They’re both using water.

      Once I get a house and can buy my own toilet, I’ma get a bidet… But I’m not fucking with the plumbing of an apartment. And I don’t see how that’d solve this specific issue.

      • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        i flush and while the flush is going i rinse the bowl to get any stains that i couldn’t pee off, so as to not have to scrub as often. all you have to do is attach a T-joint to the water line coming to the toilet, assuming it’s not those damn 7/8" fill valves (my ACE doesn’t have 7/8" T-joints). then when you move out, plug the line you remove.