This is one of the best videos I've seen on TH-cam explaining all aspects of how a toilet works. I rate it a 9 of 10 & would give it a 10 if it had shown the water coming around the underside of the rim down to the siphon jet hole, since that is such an important aspect of this process. The fact that that occurs IS mentioned, so kudos for that, but it doesn't illustrate it. The reason I feel this is so important is b/c it helps demonstrate the importance of the free flow of water from the siphon jet. The importance of that becomes VERY obvious if the siphon jet gets blocked with sediment build-up or a dropped toothpaste cap, as then the toilet will develop a "lazy flush" where paper & solids will stay in the bowl b/c a strong-enough flush cannot be created. If your toilet develops a lazy flush, stick a gloved finger in that siphon jet hole & check for a blockage there. If sediment is built up, you can use a long screw, a piece of small diameter plastic pipe, or a coat hanger to poke at & break up the sediment to get it out, & get back to a strong flush! [mcsmama 6.3.2022]
The following is haunting me: What happens at 2:11 is that air infiltrates through and thus the atmospheric pressure push the left part of the U shaped tube down to the sewage system (working along with gravity). At the same time what is left in the bowl just stays still because the atmosphere is pushing with the same strength from upside and from the rightmost part of the siphon. So, basically, it's not exactly gravity that does the job but it's gravity that gets "added" to atmospheric pressure. The video is awesome but i just need to know if i'm missing or if i got this right.
Home for quarantine, I have more time in my day to answer my four-year-old’s constant questions of “What’s this? How does this work?” And me having no idea. So here I am.
This is one of the best videos I've seen on TH-cam explaining all aspects of how a toilet works. I rate it a 9 of 10 & would give it a 10 if it had shown the water coming around the underside of the rim down to the siphon jet hole, since that is such an important aspect of this process. The fact that that occurs IS mentioned, so kudos for that, but it doesn't illustrate it. The reason I feel this is so important is b/c it helps demonstrate the importance of the free flow of water from the siphon jet. The importance of that becomes VERY obvious if the siphon jet gets blocked with sediment build-up or a dropped toothpaste cap, as then the toilet will develop a "lazy flush" where paper & solids will stay in the bowl b/c a strong-enough flush cannot be created.
If your toilet develops a lazy flush, stick a gloved finger in that siphon jet hole & check for a blockage there. If sediment is built up, you can use a long screw, a piece of small diameter plastic pipe, or a coat hanger to poke at & break up the sediment to get it out, & get back to a strong flush!
[mcsmama 6.3.2022]
I searched for this
Me too
I searched for this and I feel like I'm watching a fighter jet video
How sheet clogged toilet
Same I love stuff like this
Same
This quarantine made me learn a lot of things.
How many quarantines have you been through?
@@herb_nbeatz2135 enough
The following is haunting me:
What happens at 2:11 is that air infiltrates through and thus the atmospheric pressure push the left part of the U shaped tube down to the sewage system (working along with gravity). At the same time what is left in the bowl just stays still because the atmosphere is pushing with the same strength from upside and from the rightmost part of the siphon.
So, basically, it's not exactly gravity that does the job but it's gravity that gets "added" to atmospheric pressure.
The video is awesome but i just need to know if i'm missing or if i got this right.
He actually said that
I've been wondering 30 years. thanks
ni ko me too. Ive never cared to look it up untill now. Interesting.
alejandro medrano me too Lol I just cared to look it up today after taking a leak and I'm 37 years old. 😂
Me too
Home for quarantine, I have more time in my day to answer my four-year-old’s constant questions of “What’s this? How does this work?” And me having no idea. So here I am.
Good animation.
Only in the Siphon Trapway toilets like in the Americas and Japan. Most of Europe uses wash down method.
Okay but you didn’t talk about the refill sequence at all.. which is what I came here for
Finally my question has been answered
2:00 it’s actually density not gravity
Things we searched for while in toilet 😂
Amazing!
I want to see the math behind of this
#2=tp²
Its not gravity ... its density
I just pooped and I wonder where does the poop went and how is this toilet works?
Anyone learning this in toilet?
I'm writing this comment while taking a 💩
😅😊
:)
Imagine thinking this actually works like this. It's not gravity, it's Jesus. God is the only power capable of flushing out waste.
Um you stole this video
Shame on him!