Depends where the house trap is located
NO way
call a plumber with a video camera as many plumbers do not carry one so tell them in advance.
If it was flushed then possibly it ended up in the main house trap if applicable
Shut the water supply off to the toilet. Flush the toilet. Pull the old flapper out and replace it with the same type. Turn the water back on and test the toilet.
Take your pants off, sit on the toilet, and sit on it and push till poo comes out, then when you are done, pull your pants back up, flush the toilet and wash your hands.
NO.
NO way
call a plumber with a video camera as many plumbers do not carry one so tell them in advance.
once youve flushed the tolit on shrink ray island,you go back to the microscope and see if theres any more info from cj
The discharge line (soil ) may be slightly back pitched so it takes longer to drain
Not for very long. While it is possible for it to make it back up the drain the chances are extremely small.
One would hope the last person flushed when they were done or if not, you flushed before using that particular toilet. One would also assume that if there were feces on the seat you would not use it. Once flushed, the one or two possible viruses that might still be in the toilet bowl would be killed by the chlorine in the water. It takes very little to kill the virus outside of the body.
havent you every seen flushed away? the sing and dance and put barbie doll clothes on and go down your toilet and come back up.
You don't. Once you flush it, return to the telescope for a second Morse Code message from CJ.
A flapper on a toilet is a rubber or plastic seal that covers the opening at the bottom of the toilet tank. When the toilet is flushed, the flapper lifts up to allow water to flow from the tank into the bowl, causing the toilet to flush. After the flush is complete, the flapper falls back down to seal the opening and prevent water from leaking out of the tank.
turn your inlet tap on fully and then return back to 1/4 on
There are two main reasons... 1. If the toilets are mounted back-to-back on opposite sides of a wall, some of the movement can be attributed to mechanical transmission of vibration from one to the other due to a structural connection. 2. Suction in the drain. Toilet drains have vents that allow air to move in and gas to move out. If the vents are improperly installed or get clogged they can create a suction in the drain pipe that jiggles the water in other toilet bowls. 3. The theory that this movement is caused by Toilet Gnomes becoming jealous of the attention that other Toilet Gnomes are getting and then scrambling around in a panic is false.