Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Replacement Toilet Seat - There is biggie toilet seat for heavy people with transfer issues - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521







There is biggie toilet seat for heavy people with transfer issues.  It is an over-sized design and is rated for 500 lbs.

Brand name: Bemis
Model name: Paramont
Model #: 1000CPT



One online review says, “It’s like sitting on a chair.”

Features: Functions: Benefits:


  • Extra-wide rim Greater stability Easier transfer Increased comfort and safety 
  • Commercial Grade
  • Heavy Duty
  • Withstands weight & force
  • All metal hinges, bolts & nuts
  • Stronger attachment
  • Won’t slip or break
  • Rated for 500lbs
  • All of the above
  • Universal fit
  • Adjustable hinges
  • Fits Regular or Elongated bowls

In order to have the above features, the seat is larger than the toilet bowl.  It will over-hang.
Available in white only.



Contact Gary for questions or ordering.  800-658-4521, press 2 Pacific Time.

Complete Specifications:

Closed front with cover, round/elongated, heavy-weight, injection molded
solid plastic toilet seat. Features four, large molded-in bumpers, chrome
hinges with non-corrosive 300 Series stainless steel posts and pintles
and STA-TITE® Commercial Fastening System™. This seat complies with
IAPMO/ANSI Z124.5-2013 Plastic Toilet Seats as a class Commercial Heavy Duty.

http://www.bemisseats.com/spec-sheets/43-1000cpt/file

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Replacement Toilet Seat - Office workers spreading germs by using their phones on the toilet - and even EATING there - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521






A survey of 1,000 employees found that a third make calls or play games on their phone and one in 12 consumes food or drink when they go to the toilet




Man on toilet

Workers are spreading germs by using their phones while on the toilet




Workers are spreading germs around their offices by using their phones or eating food while on the loo.
A survey of 1,000 employees found that a third make calls or play games on their phone and one in 12 consumes food or drink when they go to the toilet.
Initial Washroom Hygiene said its research revealed that two out of five office workers avoided shaking hands with a colleague who had just left a washroom.
The study, to mark Global Handwashing Day, found that most people do wash their hands after going to the loo.
Dr Peter Barratt, of Initial Washroom Hygiene, said: "As we approach the winter months when Norovirus outbreaks and flu pandemics tend to occur, it's even more important that people remain vigilant with their hand hygiene.

GettyMan sneezing on woman
Some workers say they don't shake a colleagues hand if they have just been to the toilet

"Employers have an important role to play in supporting their workers' hand hygiene and good health.
"Simple initiatives like notices reminding workers to wash, dry and sanitise their hands after visiting the washroom, before eating and when hot-desking as well as discouraging the use of mobile phones in the washroom, can make a huge difference.
"Creating a clean, pleasant and well-stocked washroom is also an effective way to support workers' hand hygiene and overall health."
source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/office-workers-spreading-germs-eating-9049951
by Alan Jones

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Replacement Toilet Seat - Let's fill a toilet with 240 pounds of mercury and then flush it - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521


Let's fill a toilet with 240 pounds of mercury and then flush it

A YouTube channel dedicated to unusual science experiments takes a bathroom break with a special toilet system and a whole lot of liquid mercury.

Mercury, both beautiful and potentially dangerous, is a heavy metal that's liquid at normal ambient temperatures. It can be poisonous and should be treated with care. So what do you do with several large flasks of the shimmery stuff? You flush it down a toilet, of course. YouTube channel Cody's Lab filmed that exact experiment for us all to watch with wonder.
The Cody's Lab video, posted on Tuesday, kicks off by discussing just how hard it is to flush a dense lead bullet down a toilet. You need a super-sucker of a loo to get the job done. The bullet test prompted Cody to try flushing mercury, an even denser metal than lead. Don't worry. Cody's special guinea-pig toilet is a closed system, so none of that nasty mercury is getting anywhere near a water supply.
Cody dumps the mercury directly into the toilet water, ramping up from a small amount to progressively larger amounts. The poor porcelain throne has trouble keeping up. It's a plumber's nightmare, but a heavy-duty plunger can encourage most of the mercury to move through the system.
Cody's final attempt involves pouring 240 pounds (109 kilograms) of mercury into the toilet in place of water. Will it flush? You'll have to watch for the answer. It's worth hanging in just for the slo-mo action shots of mercury streaming in rivulets around the white bowl.
Source: https://www.cnet.com/news/watch-240-pounds-mercury-flushed-down-a-toilet/
by Amanda Kooser

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com


Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Replacement Toilet Seat - Charlie Deal dies; inventor of toilet seat guitar - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521





Charlie Deal, a beloved character in Mill Valley who was renowned as the inventor of the toilet seat guitar, died Monday at Marin General Hospital. He was 72.
Marty Balin of the Jefferson Airplane was one of the first rock stars to buy one of Mr. Deal's toilet seat guitars. Craig Chaquico, lead guitarist for the Jefferson Starship, and Hot Tuna's Jorma Kaukonen, were also Deal guitar owners.
The most famous of Mr. Deal's guitars can be seen on the cover of the Huey Lewis and the News album, "Sports," a platinum record whose cover photo was shot at Mill Valley's 2 A.M. club. The toilet seat guitar is on the wall of the bar behind the band.
Known as the unofficial mayor of Mill Valley, Mr. Deal was a familiar figure in town, riding his bicycle around, often with a toilet seat around his neck, the makings of a new instrument.
"To me, Charlie Deal was a symbol of what Mill Valley used to be," said John Goddard, owner of the recently closed Village Music. "He was a symbol of the charm, the eccentricity, the idiosyncrasy that this town used to have. To me, Charlie's passing is almost more of a blow to what Mill Valley used to be than Sweetwater or Village Music."
Born in 1935, Mr. Deal, who worked as a janitor and handyman, moved to Mill Valley from his native Moose Lake, Minn., in 1957, when he was 21.
"Charlie symbolized what I used to love about Mill Valley: that someone like him could live and thrive in a town like this, in a county like this," Goddard said. "He was really special."
In 1968, during the psychedelic era that produced the San Francisco sound, Mr. Deal was playing in his Charlie's Gang band when he had a flash of inspiration that resulted in his first toilet seat guitar.
"I realized I was sitting on a great musical idea," he liked to say.
In another version of the story, he said he auditioned for a band and was rebuffed with the rebuke that he was "the crappiest guitar player they'd ever heard." Thus the toilet seat guitar was born.
He got a patent for his invention in 1969. Saying he made "a serious guitar with a sense of humor," he named his custom models the Royal Flush and the Straight Flush. His called his four-string basses Four Flushers. All his guitars were decorated with outhouse-style crescent moons.
"He always had a ready smile for everyone and a joke, usually a bad one," remembered musician Austin deLone, who wrote and recorded a song called "The Legend of Charlie Deal."
Bob Brown, owner of Rancho Nicasio and manager of Huey Lewis and the News, said that when "Huey hit the big time, Charlie was one of those guys who was genuinely excited that something good had happened." He added with a laugh: "When I commissioned him to make me one of his guitars, he told me, 'I've ordered a special seat just for you, Bob.'"
Mr. Deal was treated with reverence in Mill Valley.
"He came in virtually every night," recalled Sweetwater general manager John "J.B." Baracco. "It didn't matter how crowded it was or what kind of music was playing, he somehow found his way to the front of the stage and would always dance there with the girls. When you talk about Mill Valley, he was the soul of the town."
Mr. Deal was honored with a papier mach replica of him on a float in a recent Mill Valley Memorial Day parade. Mama's Royal Cafe named a sandwich after him, Charlie's Deal, and has two of his guitars on display.
"He was an institution in Mill Valley," deLone said. "Like Sweetwater and Village Music, he was part of an era that's gone by."

source: http://www.marinij.com/article/ZZ/20071031/NEWS/710319975
by Paul Liberatore

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Ever Been To A Really Fancy Toilet Party? - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521




(Rebecca Fishbein / Gothamist)
It's not often that one finds herself sipping white wine while perusing a collection of self-cleaning toilets. I tend to keep my alcohol far from the bathroom, unless it's coming out of me, from one end or another. But last night I marveled at a $7K Toto Neorest® 700H Dual Flush Toilet, wine glass in hand, wondering if anyone had ever burned their butt on a heated seat.
The aforementioned Wundertoilet was on display at the Toto flagship store in Flatiron; I was invited to check out the store's bespoke porcelain commodes as part of a media event, thanks, I assume, to this dazzling blog post I wrote about the Toto last year. Totos, for the uninformed, are hi-tech Japanese toilets. These babies can cost up to $10,000, but they come with all the amenities one might expect from such a luxurious bathroom appliance, like built-in bidets, air dryers, deodorizers, and automatic lids. Totos are so beloved that folks who own them eventually find regular toilets downright unpalatable—a Times story last year described how one Toto owner didn't relieve himself once on a 9-hour flight because using a plane toilet would be like "going back to the Stone Age."
A nearly lifelong toilet user myself, I couldn't wait to try a Toto out.
Tuesday's event promised cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, and when I arrived, a waiter pressed a white wine and teeny coconut shrimp bite into my hand while a DJ by the store window spun tracks. Though the media blast urged attendees to arrive early to accommodate a packed schedule, I was one of the first people there. There wasn't much to do other than walk around the showroom, which featured hi-tech sinks, showerheads, fancy bathroom displays and, of course, a range of Totos. The toilets looked very nice, but they didn't appear to be available for use:
One Toto enthusiast/employee, Chuck, offered to run through the different toilets on display. The lower-level Totos ran under $1000 and boasted hi-tech flushing systems, but weren't much different from standard toilets. But the Neorest® 700H Dual Flush Toilet, which retails for a cool $6,800, is the "top of the line in luxury," according to Chuck. "Once you get a Toto, you can't go back," he said. "I have two of them now." I told him I didn't think my landlord would spring for one in my apartment, but the air dry function seemed fun.
Once Chuck was done with his pitch, I got more wine and went back to wandering around the showroom. When my parents used to drag me and my sister to Home Depot when we were kids, we would run around the room displays pretending we were giving people tours of our home. In the Toto showroom, I found myself showing off the $372 Vivian Two Handle Widespread Bathroom Faucet to an invisible houseguest, whispering, "We were considering bronze, but the polished chrome is easier to clean!"
While attempting to take a bathroom mirror selfie in a display, I overheard another salesperson showing a $10K toilet off to a small tour group. "This toilet remembers your habits and keeps track of them," he explained. "If you regularly get up at 5:30, the toilet will have the lid up and seat warmed for you by the time you get to the bathroom." He also noted that in Japan, some Totos are able to monitor your insulin, cholesterol and blood sugar levels, based on your...deposits. He was unable to confirm whether these toilets will one day enslave us.
092116_toilet.jpg
Party maintenance. (Rebecca Fishbein / Gothamist)
I was an hour into the toilet party now, and I regretted not bringing a date. I briefly chatted with a plumber and attempted to eat enough thumb-sized sliders to equal a cheeseburger, but it wasn't entertainment enough. Now I knew what a Toto looked like, but what did a Toto feel like? After all, I'd had a lot of wine.
In swept Chuck, my Toto savior. He pointed me to a bathroom in the back of the store, and in it, I beheld none other than a working Neorest® 700H. Sensing my presence and very full bladder, it lifted its seat. I sucked in breath and sat down.
First and foremost, that hot seat is no joke. I expected something unsettlingly warm, like how a regular just-used seat might feel, but sitting on a Toto was akin to warming one's buns by a fire. There was a panel along the wall next to the Toto where you could play with the seat temperature, as well as activate some of the special features. It turns out I don't care much for bidets, but air dryers are lovely.
092116_toto2.jpg
HI BEAUTIFUL (Rebecca Fishbein / Gothamist)
Once I'd exhausted my time on the Toto, I got up—the toilet flushed and lowered its lid in benediction, bidding me farewell. It, and I, knew I'd never be the same.

source: http://gothamist.com/2016/09/21/have_you_ever_been_to_a_toilet_part.php
by Rebecca Fishbein

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Are you sitting down? Solid Gold Toilet at the Guggenheim Museum "America" opens , in one of the museum’s public restrooms. - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521




It’s been an exciting few years for toilet innovations. Everyone who’s anyone is showing off their $10,000 high-tech bidets.Squatty pottys have become dinner-party talk. And now, New York has finally gotten the public restroom upgrade we deserve: a Kohler-style toilet made of solid 18-karat-gold. Designed by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, the fully functional toilet opens for public use at the Guggenheim Museum today. Cattelan has titled the participatory sculpture “America,” and says that he hopes people do not see it as a joke. Gothamist estimates the cost of the appliance to be somewhere between $1,474,592 and $2,527,872, and the Guggenheim staff says it will be cleaned every 15 minutes. The New York Times’ Randy Kennedy offers this review: “As a formal matter, I’ll say that the sculpture really looks its best when in use, sparkling so much it’s almost too bright to look at, especially during the flush, which may be a new postmodern sublime.” Wow.

source:
http://www.vulture.com/2016/09/poop-in-a-solid-gold-toilet-at-the-guggenheim.html
by Erica Schwiegershausen

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Toilet Replacement Lids and Seats - A TOILET DESTROYED BY HYDRAULIC PRESS MAKES US PONDER WHY WE LOVE THESE VIDEOS - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521








For the first time ever a man completely destroyed a toilet and it made everyone happy.

This thing should write itself. Our favorite YouTube channel of needless destruction, theHydraulic Press Channel, headed to the bathroom to find inspiration (who doesn’t) and then applied a lot of pressure into ruining a toilet, a roll of toilet paper, and a soap dispenser.

Yet, instead of celebrating the only enjoyable obliteration of a porcelain throne we can think of, we suddenly find ourselves mediating on why we find these hydraulic press videos so satisfying at all. Why do they leave us feeling so relieved at the end of them? Why are they a chance tounload so much frustration and problems?

The press’ owner has crushed so many disparate items–camerastoothpastewatermelon–that it can’t be the items themselves. So it must be the two things every one of these videos have in common.
The first is the actual crushing of something. There is something innately satisfying about (safely) destroying things. It’s why kicking over your sand castle before leaving the beach is the best part of making one. It’s why everyone cheers when the Jenga tower comes down. It’s why they still make Godzilla movies. Basically we are all big kids who still get a kick out of hitting things with a mallet.
The second is the stupidity. These are inherently stupid, but in the best way possible, and there’s a huge place in the world for that kind of mindless, harmless, fun silliness. Sometimes we learn things from these videos (paper is really strong), but without fail we laugh at all of them. Crushing things with a hydraulic press doesn’t make sense, and that’s why it makes total sense. It is silly for the sake of being silly.

This is a channel that works on a very easy, satisfying level, and that’s why we love watching these videos, and why we love bringing them to you.

Plus, it was a lot of fun to make jokes about ruining a toilet.
Which video from this channel is your favorite? Tell us in the comments below.
Image: Hydraulic Press Channel

source: http://nerdist.com/a-toilet-destroyed-by-hydraulic-press-makes-us-ponder-why-we-love-these-videos/
by Michael Walsh

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com