The Romans may or may not have invented the bath plug. They were certainly one of the first civilizations to develop indoor plumbing and use bath plugs.
Quite simply the weight of water directly above the plug in a bath is considerably more than the weight of water above the plug in say a hand basin. In addition, the surface area of the bath plug is greater than that of a conventional hand basin plug. Therefore, the column of water being moved by the removal of the bath plug would have a larger volume than that of the hand basin plug. Consequently, weighing more and therefore requiring a larger force to move the plug in an upward direction. If you find pulling the plug on a chain difficult, then you can always upgrade your bath plug chain combination for a rotary cable 'pop-up' bath waste mechanism. This should aid your comfort in attending to the bath water evacuation process.
Goto Bathroom... Fill Bath Plug in toaster - turn on Get in bath Drop toaster in bath...
The easiest way would be pulling the bath plug and waiting for the water to drain.
with A bath Will stop leaking. If you would simpoly place the plug in the plughole.
I was told by my midwife that it's fine to have a bath after you have lost mucus plug, because baby is still protected by amniotic sac.
it wouldn't overflow
yes
YES!
Definitely not! Please don't mix electricity and water!
Yes, I did with my first baby. I was waiting and waiting for that mucas plug to fall out until one night my water broke. Came as a big surprise but I preferred it that way. No thinking oh it is almost time, IT WAS TIME!!
The two prong electrical plug and outlet was invented by David Brown. i know