Because to fill up a bath you need to use a lot of water, this water is more then what a typical person would use to shower (showers use less water/min then filling up the bathtube)
In general, a shower will use less water than a full bathtub.
At the end of the day having a quick shower saves more water than a bath.
Yes,defiantly bath waste more water than shower.
Normally you will use more water taking a bath than a shower.
yes It takes up much more water
shower i think
A long shower will take more water than a bath, but a bath will usually use more water than a short shower.
It depends how long you are in the shower for. A quick shower is more efficient than a bath. A power shower for a long period ( i.e. 10 mins ) may not be more efficient than a bath, depending uponm how much water it uses.Also, some people share bath water, making it ultimately more efficient than showering.It depends on how long you are in the shower for, if it is just you that has to wash, and whether you have a power shower or not.Generally however, for single persons having a quick wash, they are more efficient. If there is more than 1 person, a bath (all use the same water)If just one then a quick shower. Long showers (20min+) are worse than baths, even for just one person.
No and yes it matters how long your in but for me i am in the shower for 5-10 minuets and it uses more then a bath. The reason is that when your in a bath the same water is being used through your cleaning but with a shower it is being filtered the whole time. For me I would recommend using the shower because it is a cleaner way to clean yourself.
In a bath there is less hot water vapour condensing into particles for you to see. Steam is made up of water vapour that you can't see. More fog is produced from a shower because cold air surrounding the hot water from the shower causes water vapour to change into small water droplets called fog not steam.
In an average bath 90L of water but if you like it really full it will be more than 100L of water so in stead of having a bath have a shower because it is quicker -unless you like to stand there and enjoy the water all over you're hair -have a shower because it saves about 60L of water
Gravity. The shower head is probably 4 or 5 feet higher than the bath tap.
It depends on the length of the shower, and the flow of water. Shower heads can usually allow anywhere between 2.5 and 5 gallons of water a minute. Most baths require 30-50 gallons of water. To save energy the length of the shower x, multiplied by the water flow y, must equal less than the amount of water used in the bath. X*Y (Minutes/Gallons) < Gallons in Tub
Shower, because you don't need the water below the surface and it is already dirty. It's like sitting in your own used dirty water so you'll be dirty anyways so why use water. If your taking a shower your using clean water and you can turn off the water when you don't need it.
It is much safer to take a bath than a shower cause in the shower you can slip so I would bath
We can't provide graphs on WikiAnswers. However, here is an answer to a similar question: It depends on your shower head and whether it has a flow restrictor in it and how long you shower. If your home was built before 1992, chances are your showerheads put out about five gallons of water per minute (gpm). Multiply this by the number of minutes you're in the shower, and the water adds up fast! An average bath requires 30-50 gallons of water. The average shower of four minutes with an old shower head uses 20 gallons of water. With a low-flow shower head, only 10 gallons of water is used. To test the amount of water used in a shower vs. a bath is to put the plug in the bath next time you take a shower (but not a stand-alone shower as you might spill over the lower shower wall). After you've showered, see how much the tub filled up. If there is less water than you would usually have in a bath, then you will probably save money by taking a shower instead of a bath.
a shower if you take a quick one.Actually, it's a bath. When you are taking a shower, you usually want it to be warm or hot. While you are waiting for the shower water to heat up, water is going down the drain. While you are applying soap on your washcloth, water is going down the drain. While you are washing yourself, you don't want the shower water to rinse until the soap is all over you. It's going down the drain. As you're rinsing off, it's going down the drain.With a bath, you may wait for the water to heat up. After that, you plug up the pluggy thingy and the water stays. It only leaves when you take off the pluggy thingy.a shower :):):):):):):):):):):):)?:):)The answer is a shower uses far less water than a bath. A five minute showers uses a third of the amount of water used in bathing.
Shower, Shower heads can usually allow anywhere between 2.5 and 5 gallons of water a minute. Toilets can use this volume in a single flush. As most showers last longer than one minute the shower volume is considerably higher.