i was reserching this question but it said in Google that the oilets in Australia do not spin backwards.
Yarra Park Stadium is in Melbourne, Australia. That makes it south of the equator and will therefore swirl in the direction opposite of flushed toilets in North America, i.e. Australia - counterclockwise; USA - clockwise. (I'm in California, so when I go to the bathroom next I'll double check).
Toilets in Australia?
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In Australia, a cyclones winds travel in a clockwise direction. In the northern hemisphere, the winds travel in a counterclockwise direction.
By the looks of it, NO. Australia is such a backwards country.
I doubt water swirls in a different direction in Australia than in any other place. If it does it's caused by how the commodes are manufactured. The jets that deliver the flush water determine which way the water swirls.Answer:There is commonly held factoid ("sounds real but isn't" fact) that due to the Coriolis force water entering drains in the Northern Hemisphere swirls in the opposite direction to water in the Southern Hemisphere (just like hurricanes and cyclones are supposed to). Science has disproved this, indicating that the minor irregularities in the opening far outweigh the effect of the Coriolis force. The main cause of the water swirl (especially in toilets) is due to the design of the bowl itself.
No matter what part of the world you live in water can swirl either direction. The assumption that it swirls different is just a myth.
emus
No they do not. The Coriolanus effect is a debunked theory. Toilets and Drains, drain differently depending on how the drain is set up. I have been to Australia and they spin both ways, just as they do here in the US. It all depends. on a side note there is measurably to spin or curve of the earth. Every scientific test ever done to test for curvature or rotation has failed. Do not believe me, look it up yourself and do your own research and you will begin to see the nonsense that we were all taught.
Yes, but in a backwards fashion.
Toilets are called toilets in Australia. A toilet is also colloquially known as dunny or loo.