trollbridge
last Tuesday at 8:37 PM
I had a major plumbing problem once, in a rented commercial space. The toilet simply clogged constantly and I had to snake it almost every time. The landlord finally relented and had an expert plumber come out.
The guy apparently had a master's degree in plumbing somehow (I thought he was joking but he had indeed put himself all the way into a master's level engineering degree, mostly as a hobby). He first got out his scope and confirmed there was zero blockage in the sewer pipe and the septic tank itself. All good.
Then he started simulating flushing a load: wads of toilet paper, measured by number of squares. 17 squares went down just fine, but then he did 25, which he said is the max he expects a toilet to do. Instantly clogged.
He then told the landlord to stop buying $90 toilets and that he'd just advised a nursing home that had bought a bunch of the exact same model to rip them out and put in a better, $150 model.
So yeah, that's how you test it.
fiftyacorn
last Tuesday at 9:42 PM
My degree is chemical engineering and thats pretty close to a degree in plumbing
lostlogin
last Wednesday at 12:23 AM
Well regarded cardiac surgeon Barratt-Boyes supposedly had a brother who was a good plumber.
This always made me happy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Barratt-Boyes
fiftyacorn
last Wednesday at 10:21 AM
Oddly enough my department done work into heart replacement valves - the fluid mechanic element of blood flows as a non-newtonian fluid matched a lot of chemical plant calculations. The labs had lots of heart valves and simulators lying around
cobalt
last Tuesday at 9:26 PM
this feels like a chute diameter issue, many older (cheaper?) ones are 2in, but high flow are 3in I believe
cucumber3732842
last Wednesday at 10:40 AM
Back in "the day" you could have a toilet that lazily filled up and you only really needed a mild flow rate to send everything for a ride because once that 5gal of water starts spinning it's taking everything with it no questions asked.
You need a big hole to dump the tank fast to get the maximum kick out of that federally regulated amount of water you're allowed to dump per flush.
Plumbing fixture and residential water consumption regulation in the US is a textbook example of "should be a states issue". The feds basically let the desert states dictate everything and then everywhere east of approx the Missouri river has to suffer through washers that don't wash clothes the first time, constantly clogging drain traps, sewer lines, municipal mains, reduced septic performance, etc, etc. None of this is necessary in the nearly universally surface water consuming east. They'd all be better off using more water and having to size their water treatment plants up a notch to handle it.