Thursday, March 29, 2012

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide


Most people have only seen wall hung toilets in communal bathrooms or corporate buildings. Wall hung toilets may have had their start in commercial uses, but are rapidly becoming popular in residential bathrooms as well. In many cases for the home bathroom it saves space and allows for easy mopping under and behind the toilet. A small bathroom layout can be improved with supplementary floor space and a wall mount toilet can be a facet worth taking into consideration.

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide


Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide



Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide

There are a amount of other reasons why a wall mounted toilet might the best choice. In some structure and smaller bathrooms, venting a toilet through the floor of the room may not be feasible, like a conventional toilet. This may be the case for a consolidate of reasons. If the substrate of the bathroom is made of hard concrete and is difficult to break through cleanly, a toilet vented through the rear may be required. Basically, this means that the waste will need to go backwards into the wall instead of the toilet sitting on a pipe in the floor. Even for contemporary bathrooms, a wall hung toilets may possibly add a exiguous style.

Another functional utility that a wall mounted toilet can offer is the occasion when in a small bathroom the plumber is unable to pitch the drain of the toilet from the floor back to the waste line and stack line effectively. If this happens then a wall mounted toilet will need to be hung to work around this problem.

Wall hung toilets can also be great in small bathroom design. For a small bathroom or powder room, a wall hung toilet can add visually to improve the look of a room, especially if the toilet tank is incommunicable in the wall. The toilet will then take up much less space and add a great deal to the motion and size of the room.

Wall Hung Toilets - A Basic Guide

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Saturday, March 17, 2012

Bathroom Panels

Bathroom Panels


You may ask, what is a bathroom panel? It is essentially a exchange for bathroom tiles. Panels typically fall into two main categories: Plywood based and Upvc base. Both of these systems use a groove and tongue joint and have many advantages over the more former tiles.

Bathroom Panels

Bathroom Panels

Bathroom Panels


Bathroom Panels



Bathroom Panels

Plywood Panels are ready but a lot of fellowships only provide the Upvc ones. Upvc panels are a lot cheaper and also a lot easier to setup than their plywood counterparts. The Upvc ones are typically remarkable for home use like shower rooms and bathrooms. Plywood ones are very robust are lean towards the commercial market.

Finishes

Marble supervene - There are many different finishes these panels can have but the most favorite type is the marble finish, these are ready in a range of different colours for very subtle shades to very dramatic shades.

Wood supervene - Probably the second most favorite terminate is the Wood supervene Panel; once again these are ready in different patterns and colours. (Blue Wood is and example, this gives a whitewashed plank effect).

Mosaic supervene - These are a rather new terminate and look as a matter of fact amazing, given time these are likely to come to be one of the most favorite effects and will totally transform the look of your bathroom. These panels give the same look as real mosaic tiles but with none of the drawbacks.

You make think they are just to be used on walls? Well you are wrong; these panels are so versatile that they can even be used on the ceiling. Very Light or white colours tend to work best.

Bathroom Panels

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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Toilet Parts

Toilet Parts


The parts of a toilet contain internal parts (filler valve, filler float, overflow tube, flush valve, siphon tube) and external parts (handle, tank, rim, bowl). While internal toilet parts originate the siphon that makes a toilet work, the external toilet parts have a role as well beyond that of relax and appearance.

Toilet Parts

Toilet Parts

Toilet Parts


Toilet Parts



Toilet Parts

Toilets flush when sufficient water is pushed into the siphon tube that it fills up. This estimate of water causes the siphon action that sucks the water from the toilet bowl. The siphon process ends when the toilet bowl is empty and there is nothing left to pull.

What turns a primitive toilet bowl with a siphon into the tasteless household toilet is the tank. Small amounts of water are not sufficient to cause the flush reaction because there is not sufficient water to fill the siphon tube. If there is not sufficient water in the tank, the siphon won't work, so the tank shop any gallons of water at a time and refills quickly. These any gallons of water are what make all the other toilet parts work together to originate the siphon. The cope of the toilet is attached to the flush valve that acts as a plug in the tank. When the cope is pushed, the valve lifts and all the tank's water pours out into the bowl and down the siphon tube, filling it and causing the siphon to start. The other toilet part that is included in this process is the overflow tube. When the flush valve lifts, some of the tank water is siPhoned up the overflow tube and directed to the bowl, to starts gradually refilling it. When the cope is released, the flush valve settles back into place and plugs the tank again.

To refill the tank and the bowl, the rest of the toilet parts mentioned above come into play. The filler float floats in the tank water and is attached to the filler valve. When the toilet's cope is pushed and the water leaves the tank, the float drops with the water level and, when it does, the filler valve is opened. While the toilet flushes, the refill valve starts gradually refilling the tank. Once the water level in the tank floats the filler float back to the top, the valve is shut off and the water stops running.

Toilet Parts

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