depends on the kind of toilet and where you live. today's standard in America is 1.6 gallons. more efficient models will use 1.28 gallons. some even have a dual-flush option, 0.8 gallons for #1 and 1.6 gallons for #2.
In the newer design toilets, an effective flush is achieved with about 1.3 gallons of water. That water is not "wasted", it is performing an important service. More water than is necessary to flush the bowl clean would be wasted, yes (older toilets). And that is why they were re-designed.
If you have an older style toilet (15 years or more) then you are flushing away about 18 litres of water per flush. All new toilets flush an average of 13 litres per flush and many even give the choice of a 6 or 13 litre flush with the use of a dual flush button. -In US and Canada people are incredibly wasteful of water in general. We use nearly 2-3 times per capita what most other countries use.
The correct answer is 1.6 gallons per flush for newer more efficient toilets, up to 4 or more gallons per flush for older toilets.
The average toilet today uses about 1.5 gallons of water per flush
Most modern toilets use 13 litres per flush. Many have an option for 6 litres.
About 10 gallons. That's a bit much. Usually 3.5 gallons for an older model and 1.6 for newer model.
One and a half to three gallons depending on the age of the toilet. Newer ones should have it stamped on the back inside surface of the tank.
It gets sent out into space which forever orbits the Earth. ----------------------------------------------------- Actually, it is recycled and reused as drinking water
The sewage system underground is where it goes o oh wait it also gets filtered #(
either the vert is plugged and there is no air getting through or there is no vent at all
That would be a swirly.
When you flush your toilet, cold water is used, this diverts cold water from the sinks and showers, resulting in diminished cold water flow momentarily at the sinks and showers, so, less cold mixed with hot, = hotter sinks and showers.
No. the average toilet used is mechanical and uses gravity to flush. e parts need to be in p-top shape hen the Toilet Gets Flushed e easiest way to see how the whole system orks together is to flush the toilet with the lid f. That still leaves the question of how it al nctions. It is actually pretty simple. the flush lever to rise up pulling the chain with it which makes water rush down into the bowl evel lowers enough that it drops back down over the flush valve the refill valve and allows new water into the tank. Th water is coming in much more slowly than the water going out so it doesn't interfere with the flapper
it ends as the boy ( i forget his name) and another dude put die in the toilet and flush it to show the trail. they call the coast guard and the guy gets caught
This is not an uusual as when the toilet is flushed more cold water is drawn usually from the cold water pipe that suplies the shower with cold water so generaly the water under the shower gets hotter. The only way to stop this from happening is to lay an extra pipe all the way to the ater suply point, or fit a pump to maintain the presure
Ewww..flush your toilet. And for heaven's sake don't let the dog lick you on the face for a while. Like, a l-o-n-g while.
You would replace a flush valve or 'flapper' when it gets distorted or leaks slowly as they all eventually do. Take it out and go to Home Depot and you will see many better ones than there were when your toilet was made. Average cost $6-10.
Small air bubbles in the toilet after you flush could indicate a clog. The clog may not yet be big enough to stop the toilet from flushing but you should take care of it before it gets worse. You should get an auger to clear the clog.
....... water gets in the system, and breaks. simple answer