You don't use caulk on a toilet. Between the tank and the bowl there is a foam gasket, to seal it to the drain in the floor, you use a wax ring. Either put the ring on the bottom of the toilet or on the drain and sit the toilet straight down on it. Make sure it is thick enough to make a good seal, there is the regular thickness one, an extra thick one and if needed, you can stack two on top of each other.
Alas, no. What makes it worse is that very few stations have them either. EDIT: the RER trains have toilets. The metro trains don't.
elizabethan
Yes! He raped a little kid in McDonalds toilets
they didnt invent toilets then s9o they threw it out side (which was the streets)
Koga. He uses Poison type. Use Steel type, for they are not affected by poison. Or use Ground type because they are strong against poison.
Use an exterior window caulk. If you plan to paint over it make sure it is "paintable" caulk. Run the bead of caulk using a caulking gun. You can smooth out the bead with your finger and clean up any residual caulk with a wet rag (this clean uo only works if the caulk is water based...check the tube to make sure it is....it's easier if it is) If you use silicone caulk you can't paint it and you cannot clean up any errors with a wet rag so unless you are real exact in applying the bead I would avoid this type of caulk.
Polyseamseal silicone caulk would be the best caulking to use with bathroom tile, if you're not going to pain the caulk. If you desire to paint the caulk, MAPEI latex caulk would be best to use with the bathroom tile.
I use 100% silicon on the outside of the windows, and Alex ll caulk on inside.
No. Use the putty.
None. Use Epoxy.
Silicone will work better.
You can use 3m's caulk remover and a sharp razor blade.
Kaolinite
people should use toilets
Instead of using any ordinary caulk, use Rubex Caulk. Rubex MS is a highly weather resistant and paintable caulk. It is very effective in sealing around our RV's vents AC's and corners. In addition, common applications include preparation for the Liquid EPDM Rubber around windows and door frames, flashing, and joint-filling.
It depends on what type of flush you use. Old style single flush toilets use around 11 litres of water per flush, older dual flush toilets use 4.5 or 9 litres per flush, while modern water efficient dual flush toilets use 3 or 6 litres per flush.
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