An old toilet typically uses between 3.5 to 7 gallons of water per flush. In contrast, modern toilets are designed to be more water-efficient, using about 1.6 gallons or less per flush. The significant difference in water usage highlights the benefits of upgrading to newer, low-flow models for water conservation.
9,239,845,561 on the average
Old toilets 5.5 gallons, the minimum on new ones is 1.6 gallons
1.6
Depending on the model, toilets can flush anywhere from .6 (low-flow) to 1.6 (standard now) to 3.5 (older toilets).Gate Tube Toilet Water Saver test conducted at the Stevens Institute of Technology, Center for Environmental Systems in Hoboken N.J., confirm:A 2011 WaterSense designated 1.28 GPF Glacier Bay toilet fixture consumes on average 1.52 gallons per complete cycle.A 1997 WaterSense designated 1.6 GPF American Standard toilet consumes on average 2.07 gallons per complete cycle.A 3.5 gallon American Standard toilet consumes 4.23 to 4.31 gallons per complete cycle.Consumers should be aware that Gallons Per Flush (GPF) does not a represent the total gallons consumed for a complete flush and refill cycle.
32 cups in 2 gallons ^-^
99908977t
9,239,845,561 on the average
over 1,000 gallons
Modern toilets use 1.6 gallons of water to flush and older models used 3 gallons
Old toilets 5.5 gallons, the minimum on new ones is 1.6 gallons
7.5 gals It depends on whether the toilet is one of the newer a water saving types, some of which only use about one gallon, while many older toilets use several gallons per flush.
About 1.6 gallons per flush
It takes approx 2 to 5 gallons of water. Depending on the age of the toilet and the type of flush you have.
It takes 5-7 gallons of water per flush.
The toilet uses about 1.6 gallons per flush.
A standard 1999 toilet tank typically holds around 1.6 gallons of water. However, older models may vary in capacity, ranging from 3.5 to 5 gallons per flush.
It depends on what type of toilet you have. If you have an older toilet than, it may hold more than a newer toilet holds.