Toilets. We all use them. But did you know you could be flushing your money away — not to mention excessive amounts of water? The average household flushes 1,500 gallons a month. You can cut that amount by a third, saving cash, water, and your dignity — all for under $3. Umbra lifts the lid and leads the way.
“Ask Umbra” is the first video series produced by GristTV. Look for new video tips for greening your life from Umbra nearly every week.
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Related stories on Grist
Ask Umbra on replacing toilets
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Ask Umbra on recycled toilet paper
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And while you’re online …
Calculate your water footprint
See how to make your own dual-flush toilet — for $30!
Find out how a toilet works
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Comments
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GreeningTX Posted 10:40 am
21 Jul 2009
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normbear Posted 2:08 pm
21 Jul 2009
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Going Green Posted 10:35 pm
21 Jul 2009
But great info and well edited. Nicely done.
Did you know that right now, there are also lots of rebates for replacing toilets? Thanks for the great vid!
Jonathan
www.GreenJoyment.com
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amazingdrx Posted 2:14 pm
22 Jul 2009
That has happened already. But has been barely noticed by any media anywhere. There are several systems that use air pressure (kind of like the tube system at the drivein bank) to move the waste out of your bathroom, using only air, and into the composting toilet tanks, outside your house. A service can even come in and remove the composted waste for you once a year or so. And it's all much cheaper than regular urban/rural sewer systems. Then there are the other huge advantages of keeping hormones, antibiotics, and GHG out of our environment.
Waterless flushing using just a shop vac type blower on a composting sewer tank outdoors, with a flush button on the toilet. Suction power! Urnie and solids can even go in separate containers. That allows the best recycling of each waste stream. Urine is easily dried and can be collected and processed into zero carbon organic fertilizer to replace GHG intensive oil based fertilizer.
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WaterConsNYC Posted 4:17 pm
22 Jul 2009
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amazingdrx Posted 11:37 pm
22 Jul 2009
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amazingdrx Posted 11:54 pm
22 Jul 2009
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amazingdrx Posted 8:34 am
23 Jul 2009
Even people off the grid and municipal plumbing can flush and shower with low power/low water use suction flush composting and fog gun washing. The much smaller volume of water can be filtered and transported from a local water source or rain water with a very small solar electric or hand pump. Likewise for compressed air for the fog gun. In this case green tech makes for a plumbing system that costs orders of magnitude less than standard plumbing, sewers, & wells. And that increases the speed of adoption and quality of life for the people in these emerging economies. Either we here in the US start manufacturing these products or others will, our best business plan as a developed economy would be to organize local distributed manufacturing, where we use our knowledge and capital to help out and then get a nice return on our investment. Create local jobs from Peoria to Pakistan with customers for the products generated by the business. Rather than colonialists or neoconman corporate feudalists, who mainly specialize in exploitation and weapons trading, and starting (maintaining endless) wars based on lies; why not try to act a little more like google-style capitalists. Do well by doing good. A few pennies profit from each water system or solar system, instead of huge windfall manipulated profits from resource war. This is sustainable business, based on knowledge, invention, inovation, and competition. If you risk capital and develop a better product that people want to improve their quality of life, then your profits are deserved.
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amazingdrx Posted 11:29 pm
27 Jul 2009
The Fog Gun appears in Dymaxion World illustration 88-92 but not in Inventions. Dymaxion World, Buckminster Fuller’s Universe and other sources quote Fuller claiming that while in the Navy he was able to clean grease off his hands by the mist eternally surrounding ships at sea. The fog gun was a means of directing atomized water under pressure for hygiene purposes. The fog gun is mentioned in Fuller’s 1938 book Nine Chains to the Moon. Dymaxion World claims the fog gun was tested at the Institute of Design in Chicago in 1948 “and subsequently at Yale and other universities.†In these tests a one-hour “massaging pressure bath†used one pint (.47 liters) of water. In session 11 part 2 of Fuller’s 42-hour lecture “Everything I Know,†Fuller claims professional dermatologists were consulted in researching the fog gun. Dymaxion World continues by saying “If fog gun bathing were done in front of a heat lamp, [all the effects of bathing] could be effected without the use of any bathroom. Since there would be no run-off waters, tons of plumbing and enclosing walls could be eliminated, and bathing would become as much an ‘in-the-bedroom’ process as dressing.†Buckminster Fuller’s Universe claims the test of the fog gun found it to be “a completely satisfactory system of cleansing, which, in fact, caused less damage to skin than ordinary soap and water. Thus, another significant artifact was created and left until a time when future generations would require it.†Has that generation arrived?
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Username Posted 10:41 am
28 Jul 2009
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tootall Posted 2:49 am
30 Jul 2009
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