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Seriously, disregard whatever idiot said what is above this, as well as his answer. The water would either look whitish, or their would be a thick white cloud floating i the water, depending on how much time had passed since your son ejaculated. Basically, the more time had passed, the more the ejaculate fluid would have spread apart in the toilet. I really hope this helped because now my hands hurt. I've been answering question after question for the past 1/2 hour.
because the flushing washer is broken and needs to be replaced, or the inlet washer is broken and the water is over flowing into the pan
Why would you want to know that?HUH?!
A toilet may bubble due to a blockage in the plumbing system, causing air to get trapped and create bubbles when flushing.
Yes, that may well hang on in a narrow part. Once paper builds around it the clog will solidify. I would remove the toilet from the floor and snake it from the floor end.
The amount of water used in flushing a toilet varies depending on the model. Standard toilets typically use about 1.6 gallons per flush, while older models may use up to 3.5 to 7 gallons per flush. Therefore, flushing a toilet 20 times would use approximately 32 gallons for a standard toilet and potentially up to 140 gallons for an older model.
The basic parts that make up the flushing system of the toilet would be the ideal parts for a toilet repair kit. The larger parts like the bowl are not things you are likely to consider repairing. So the idea bits would would a handle, washers, plunger.
In 1957 a Leave it to Beaver episode "Capitan Jack" showed the toilet tank, but not the seat (censors would not allow the whole toilet to be shown). There is no 'notes' (at least that I can find) of when the 'whole' toilet was ever shown. The movie "Psycho" (1960) was the first to show a complete toilet.
I am male. I use new women's panties to wank on the toilet, I will wipe my bottom with them as well. When I am done I flush them down the toilet. Some times up to thirty pairs a week.
They can be mixed.
If activities like watering the lawn or flushing the toilet were done with grey water instead of fresh water, more fresh water would be conserved.
Bubbles in the tank when flushing the toilet can be a sign of a faulty flapper not sealing properly. This can lead to air entering the tank, creating bubbles. Check the flapper for damage or misalignment and replace if needed to fix the issue.
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!