It can take a rough average of between 6 and 18 liters (litres) of water to flush a household toilet. This is dependant on many factors though.Usually, most toilets average around 6 litres, but they vary. The numbers of gallons and litres are usually behind the cover to the toilet.
It all depends on the size of the toilet The size of the cistern. the SASE of the cistern outlet, the material that the toilet is made from, the size of the sewerage pipe and what hemisphere you are in.
No, the Romans did not invent the toilet. The first toilets were chamber pots and every ancient society had them. However, the Romans did improve them by inventing their version of a flush toilet.
With 5 cards: Straight Flush: approx 72,192 to 1 Royal Flush: 649,740 to 1 With 6 cards: Straight Flush: approx 12293 to 1 Royal Flush: 108289 to 1 With 7 cards: Straight Flush: approx 3590 to 1 Royal Flush: 30939 to 1
In a modern toilet you use 13 litres per flush.
pit toilets are like portapotties that have a hole that has plumbing but isn't done very frequently a flush toilet has a bowl that flushes the waste when wanted using a plumbing system
anticlockwise. (All toilets in the Northern Hemisphere flush clockwise, all toilets in Southern Hemisphere flush anticlockwise.)
The biggest difference from an old toilet to a new one is the water consumption. An older toilet can use up to 16L of water per flush! A modern toilet only uses between 3-5L per flush. A big money saver!
Yes
No
pit toilets, composting toilets, pour-flush latrine, cistern-flush toilet, bucket latrine
It depends on what type of flush you use. Old style single flush toilets use around 11 litres of water per flush, older dual flush toilets use 4.5 or 9 litres per flush, while modern water efficient dual flush toilets use 3 or 6 litres per flush.
The difference between flush and semi-flush mounted ceiling lights is that one of them can be mounted on the ceiling and the other one can be mounted elsewhere.
Yes, but not in the way we think of flushing toilets. In private houses, a bucket or two of water was used to flush away the waste and prevent odor. In the public toilets latrines, there was a stream of running water beneath the seats to flush away waste.
no
NO.
jeffrey