Water Conserving Toilet And Preventing Sewer Backup

Posted by Business
By Henry Do


If your home was constructed well before 1992

Your bathroom toilet may be consuming between 3.5 and 5.7 gallons in every flush. 1992 is the year the federal government began mandating the low-flush (low-flow) toilet due to the National Energy Policy Act (H.R. 776). So there have been plenty of Los Angeles plumbers setting up Low flush toilets which normally consume 1.6 gallons per flush and newer High-Efficiency Toilets (HET) may use as low as 1.28 gallons every flush. A plumber can easily look at your toilet to determine how many gallons it utilizes with every single flush.

If your house was built before the 1980's

In the 80s a local plumber would most likely set up a toilet utilizing 3.5 gallons. Today, a plumbing technician would install a new toilet which uses no more than 1.6 gallons of water in the U.S., and also when compared to 3.5 gpf, that's practically 2 gallons of water saved per flush.

If your home was built before the 1970's

Before the 50s, toilets typically consumed 7 gallons or more for every single flush. By the end of the 1960s, toilets were designed to flush with only 5.5 gallons. So if your have a home that was built around the late 1950's or much earlier you may want to find a plumber to check your toilet to see if it has been upgraded to a low flow toilet, and you can save hundreds of gallons of h2o annually, simply have a plumber check it out.

Toilet Choices

In the beginning, manufacturers & plumbers tweaked the valves and floats in the tank to lower the water consumed without making any changes to the tank or bowl. The 2 most common adaptations were to have a plumber install a flush-valve flapper which closes just before all the water escapes the tank (early-close flapper) or to have a plumbing technician put in a plastic bucket, or toilet dam, which retains some water in the toilet tank right behind the dam, thus lowering the amount of flush. A few manufacturers & plumbers switched to low-capacity tanks with a standard flapper, while others made a decision to use new pressurized flush technology.

Double Flush Water Conservation Set

You might need a local plumber to set up a dual flush toilet kit and water conservation tool for a standard toilet. The kit will transform your toilet to a dual flush improving the overall performance of your existing toilet for a small fraction of the price of a brand new dual flush toilet. A dual flush retrofits existing toilets to perform like low flow toilets and in some cases helps you to save much more water than a high priced HET toilet, it allows the home owner or plumbing technician to convert the current toilet into a water saving dual flush system. This particular system provides a house owner the water savings and also allows them to recycle/reuse the previous toilet, by converting your old toilet to save water you're also saving our landfills.

Toilet Bank/Float enhancer

A very inexpensive item is a tank bank or float booster, your local plumbing technician may have them. This may conserve 10 or more gallons of water daily. It's a water conserving product that is effective, lower in cost, easy to maintain and easy to use, you may not even need to call a plumbing technician. It's the least complicated and simple to use toilet tank water saving device; just load with h2o and hang on the inside of the toilet tank. Most saves an approximate 80 to 160 oz. of water per flush depending upon whether one or two are utilized. With the typical plumber flushing at least six times a day, water savings add up.

Remember

If there's insufficient water to get a proper flush you might be using your plunger or you may have to contact a Los Angeles plumber. At times a plumber will hold the handle down for a long time or do numerous flushes to get rid of waste. 2 flushing's at 1.4 gallons is a whole lot worse than only one 2.0 gallon flush. A better tip is to purchase an adjustable toilet flapper from your plumbing technician which enable adjustment of each flush use. Then the person can adjust the flush rate to the minimum per flush setting that accomplishes a single excellent flush each time. If you find this hard then simply ask a local plumber to assist. Also, avoid flushing towels, baby diapers, paper products (besides toilet paper) to avoid sewer backup. Using the toilet as a wastebasket is simply a phenomenal waste of water.

Written by Boss Plumbing & Heating Co., a Los Angeles based plumbing company serving the Greater Los Angeles area for more than 20 years. Specializing in home plumbing service like sewer backup, Boss Plumbing can be reached at www.bossplumbing.com or at (323) 464-4700.




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