One can purchase a power flush toilet from Amazon website. American Standard manufacture this kind of toilets, one can go to their official website and choose what they wants.
Purchase a new one! :D
Well, it depends how many times you don't flush a toilet. If you don't flush it one time, nothing happens. But if you don't flush it for a month or something, and then you finally flush it, it may get clogged with toilet paper.
If the toilet works each time on one flush, they use roughly half the water of a standard toilet. You would then use half as much a month on the toilet. They do not always flush completely on the first flush and the toilet is only a part of the water bill.
There are many sites online that instruct users on how to use a dual flush toilet. To be more specific, one of the most trusted sites that offers dual flush toilet tutorials is Youtube.
one step up from an outhouse, no flush
before
One in which everything doesnt make it down the first flush so you give it another go.
You go to the toilet that is is close to the power room and press square 3 times.( the toilet is the one at the left ) when you press square wit til you hear it flush completly.if you dont know where the toilet is it is in front of the stg-44 to the left
flush him down the toilet.... then get anthor one if you want
I would intentionally overflow a public toilet by taking the lid off the back, then taking out the thing that covers the hole in the bottom. Then clog the toilet and just wait. The toilet will just flush and flush and flush and flush until it overflows. And then it will keep flushing. You could flood the entire bathroom with no one even knowing!
In an effort to save water, a half flush toilet uses only half as much. They generally have a button of some sort that allows you to choose a full flush (for heavy duty loads) or a half flush (for lighter loads.) I have also seen this referred to as "the number one button" (half flush) and "the number two button" (full flush.)
In an effort to save water, a half flush toilet uses only half as much. They generally have a button of some sort that allows you to choose a full flush (for heavy duty loads) or a half flush (for lighter loads.) I have also seen this referred to as "the number one button" (half flush) and "the number two button" (full flush.)