How Replacing Toilets Work - podcast episode cover

How Replacing Toilets Work

Sep 28, 20122 min
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Episode description

A family of four can consume more than 300 gallons of water per day. Old toilets use 5 gallons per flush, and this water use quickly adds up. Check out this HowStuffWorks podcast and learn why cities across the US are replacing their old commodes.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from how stuff works dot com where smart Happens. Hi Am Marshall Brain with today's question, why are they replacing all of the toilets in this apartment complex? It's true many cities have conducted a massive drive to replace older toilets with new water saving models. Here's why. A family of four can consume something like three four hundred gallons of water per day on things like bathing, cooking, drinking, laundry, and dishwashing. Old toilets use

about five gallons or twenty leaders per flush. When you consider that a normal person flushes a toilet seven or so times a day, you can see that a family of four consumes more than a hundred and forty gallons of water per day flushing alone. Depending on the article you're reading, the water consumption of toilets represents between thirty fifty percent of the water consumed by a household each day. The new toilets installed in your apartment use one point

six gallons or six leaders per flush. If you replace those five gallon per flush toilets with these new one point six gallon per flush toilets, you save a huge amount of water. Something like a hundred gallons per day per household for a city. A big reduction like that means that you can delay the construction of new reservoirs and new sewage treatment plants. That's a huge incentive to

replace all the old toilets. For more on this and thousands of other topics because it house staff works dot com

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