Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Replacement Toilet Lids and Seats - New seating solutions for assistive toilet launches as manufacturer highlights home adaptation importance - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521

Closomat toilet seats image



Following the unveiling of its new Asana range, Closomat has developed a range of seating solutions which reinforce the importance of toilet seating.
Highlighting that on average, a person goes use the toilet eight times a day on average, the company says using the lavatory is one of the four key daily activities inherent to everyday life.
Due to the toilet’s importance in daily living, changes to toileting is one of the most common home adaptations carried out according to Closomat, accounting for one quarter of all home adaptations.
Mark Sadler, Sales Director at Closomat, commented: “The right seat makes a big difference to your ability to use the toilet comfortably, effectively and safely.
“It is only when you are faced with any limitation you realise how potentially restricting a standard toilet seat can be for any manual access, or to accommodate certain physical considerations and limitations.”
Addressing size, gender and physical considerations, Closomat’s new seating options can be specified with the initial Closomat or changed retrospectively should the user’s needs change.
Minimising the need for care support, the seating solutions also enhance the toilet’s delivery of independence and dignity due to its integrated douching and drying, meaning users do not have to struggle, or rely on a carer, to wipe clean.
“A ‘horse shoe’, bariatric, contrasting or soft seat makes a world of difference to the user’s ability to ‘go’ with ease, safety and comfort- for however long they are sat,” Mark added.
“A little thought on the correct choice of seat can be the difference in an adaptation changing someone’s life for the better.”
Established almost 60 years ago, Closomat is a supplier of accessible toileting technology with an aim of helping people achieve dignified and effective cleanliness after toileting.






"We love our cartons labels by WebSticker.com."

source: http://www.thiis.co.uk/new-seating-solutions-for-assistive-toilet-launches-as-manufacturer-highlights-home-adaptation-importance/

by Newsroom, Supplier News

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Replacement Toilet Lids and Seats - The Air Force’s $10,000 toilet cover - This Old Toilet 800-658



A latrine cover for a C-5 Galaxy cargo plane used by the Air Force, designed to protect the area from corrosion. The Air Force paid a contractor $10,000 for this item on three separate occasions, most recently in 2017, before the service started using 3-D printing to make the part. (U.S. Air Force)



To the Air Force, it’s a “cover-center wall, troop compartment latrine . . . required to protect the aircraft from corrosion damage in the latrine area.”
To the rest of us, it’s a toilet cover. And until recently, it had a price tag of $10,000.
Officials said last week that the U.S. Air Force paid about $10,000 each to replace toilet seat covers on the C-5 Galaxy, a Vietnam-era military cargo plane that is still in service, at least three times and as recently as last year.
The reason, they say, is that the plane’s manufacturer no longer produces the part, forcing the government to order a customized one when it needs to be replaced. More recently, the service has been able to cut the average cost of the toilet cover to about $300 by using a 3-D printer, an approach top officials want to replicate for other acquisitions.

Air Force officials describe the $10,000 toilet cover as a case of supply-chain economics gone wrong.
The C-5 dates to the 1960s, when it was used to move troops and cargo during the Vietnam War. Lockheed Martin, the plane’s original manufacturer, shut down its C-5 production line in 2001 when the military stopped buying new models. But the Air Force still counts 52 of them in its fleet, and some of them have been put to use in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Keeping the old planes ready to fly means bits of hardware occasionally need to be replaced. Since the Air Force maintains painstakingly specific requirements for equipment components — even toilet parts — doing so is rarely as simple as a trip to Home Depot.
The Air Force says with the Lockheed’s C-5 production line no longer active, there is no company with a fully staffed assembly line ready to produce exactly what it needs. That means the government has to hire a manufacturer to make a mold of the original toilet seat cover, redesign two-dimensional drawings to make sure the cover fits, manufacture a mold for the part, and then produce it — effectively reverse-engineering the toilet cover and building it from scratch.






"We love our cartons labels by WebSticker.com."

source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/capitalbusiness/the-air-forces-10000-toilet-cover/2018/07/14/c33d325a-85df-11e8-8f6c-46cb43e3f306_story.html?utm_term=.7538f9170528

by Aaron Gregg

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Replacement Toilet Lids and Seats - The black toilet: An unconventional bathroom accessory that's back - This Old Toilet 800-658-4521






When the jet-black toilet was introduced by Kohler in the 1920s, it was considered so avant-garde that it was featured in a 1929 Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibit about the design of the "modern bath and dressing room."
This spring, when designer Scott Sanders installed a black toilet (Kohler's Memoirs Stately) and black sink (Kohler's Caxton undermount) in his powder room at the 2018 Kips Bay Decorator Show House, it was still considered avant-garde.
"A white toilet and a white sink are the most expected thing you can do in a bathroom," says Sanders, who is based in New York. "A powder room should be chic and interesting. It's great to treat your guests to something really unexpected."
Sanders admits it's not a look for everyone. "It's not the first time I've used one. Sometimes if you suggest it, though, you do get some pushback. 'A black toilet?' They look at you like you have two heads." But Sanders explains that basic black blends in more than white does, allowing for a greater number of wallpaper choices.




"We love our cartons labels by WebSticker.com."


source: https://www.sfgate.com/lifestyle/article/The-black-toilet-An-unconventional-bathroom-13051512.php#photo-15825557
by Jura Koncius

http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Replacement Toilet Lids and Seats -Lisa Hardt’s toilet tours might sound crappy, but they’re really a love letter to Orlando businesses- This Old Toilet 800-658-4521


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Lisa Hardt’s toilet tours might sound crappy, but they’re really a love letter to Orlando businesses 

Game of thrones

George Costanza, arguably the most neurotic character on the classic sitcom Seinfeld, had something akin to encyclopedic knowledge of Manhattan's public restroom scene – or, as he would have described it, its most "magnificent facilities."
But would you believe us if we said Orlando has its own washroom academic?
Enter Lisa Hardt, whose Instagram project, @theshittybeautiful, has inspired a series of local toilet tours.


For the last year, Hardt has chronicled the City Beautiful's loos, from the disturbingly wrecked to the quaint and elegant. It's less a crappy hobby than it is a way of recording some of Orlando's best and booziest nooks – and, to be clear, she's less the hysterical Costanza type than she is enagaging and quick to laugh.

PHOTO BY JEN CRAY


Her semi-regular outings now take place every month or two, but the idea behind presenting free toilet tours was born accidentally, springing out of a photo folder on her phone.
"It was a thing that kept happening when I was in bathrooms: I wanted to take photos of things, so I just started a weird folder on my phone that I always joked I would do something with," Hardt says. "And after making this joke for, like, six months, my friends encouraged me to actually make it into a thing."
But it's not exactly the type of toilet tour that you might expect – she doesn't drag fans from place to place just to poke their heads inside random restrooms – which, frankly, doesn't sound all that appealing considering the hazards that come with the territory. Really, it's more about finding an excuse to get to the restrooms once you're there – and by that we mean she and her @theshittybeautiful fans are pretty much just out to drink and be merry.
PHOTO BY JEN CRAY
After all, is there no greater common denominator between us than nature's call?
"Orlando's great about having locally owned businesses and I think any time you can support that in your community, you're making your community a better place," Hardt says. "A lot of times when we do these tours, you might have been to one or two of the places, but there's a lot of places you haven't been to and you might find your new favorite bar, or you might just make some new friends – which is also good."
She continues: "I've definitely found some gems that I didn't know existed from doing research for the toilet tours, and I'd love to pass that on to other people."
So what makes for the best sort of public restroom? Let's take it from Hardt.
In the opinion of this bathroom bon vivant, there are two vital qualities when it comes to ranking the most lavish lavatories: cleanliness and appearance.
Sorted into two categories – the shitty and the beautiful – here are Hardt's 10 current favorite bathrooms in Orlando. (She means "shitty" in a good way, of course, because you can't appreciate the shitty without the beautiful, at least not in the City Beautiful.)


PHOTO BY JEN CRAY


The Shitty

Will's Pub
Hardt says her favorite thing about the bathrooms inside Will's Pub is that they are so different every time you walk in, whether for better or worse – but that usually means something along the lines of new graffiti, stickers, etc. The bathrooms match the pub: punk rock, full of personality, one of a kind
Similar to Will's, the bathroom walls of Stardust are an ever-changing landscape. They were smart enough to put clipboards on the walls for people to write and draw on, which makes the graffiti appear more artistic and intentional than it might seem otherwise. Her favorite part is the graffiti all over the baby-changing station, which seems to label this as a bathroom for cool parents only.
Tanqueray's
OK, so this bathroom isn't always at its cleanliest. In fact, it's usually pretty raunchy. However, what it lacks in cleanliness it makes up for in personality. Tanqueray's is a basement bar, which is already unique for Orlando, and to get to the bathrooms you have to walk up a few steps. That sounds easy enough, but Tanqueray's bartenders are pretty heavy-handed, so the stairs get exponentially more challenging throughout the night. Those factors do equate to the perfect formula when it comes to making friends while standing in line, though.

Sportstown
There are multiple bathrooms here, but in this case, Hardt's specifically referring to the unisex one hidden in the corner. Finding this bathroom is an adventure in itself, but it usually smells better than others – so it's worth the search. Once there, you'll notice the eclectic paintings, including a cute yet terrifying cat portrait right above the toilet. It's also the only place where she's noticed ashtrays in the bathrooms, which could be a positive or a negative depending on who you are. Looking beyond these flourishes, the sink is surprisingly fancy, with a beautiful floral backsplash.


PHOTO BY JEN CRAY


The Beautiful

The Guesthouse
Everything in these bathrooms is uber hip, which makes sense: The Guesthouse is definitely one of the most Instagrammed bars in town. But the palm tree-patterned wallpaper is what really sells it, making it oh so Florida. It's Hardt's favorite bathroom for a good mirror selfie, she says.
Collective Kindness
It's technically a boutique in Oakland, Florida, not an Orlando bar – but this one needs to be included, Hardt says. You can tell a lot of thought and love went into every inch of the new Collective Kindness home, and it doesn't start and end in the bathroom. From the hand-stenciled floor to the hand-painted walls by Jessa Bray, this bathroom is simultaneously chic and unique.
Tap & Grind
A hidden gem (and a 2016 Best of Orlando Writer's Pick winner) where the walls are covered in a beautiful tile mosaic. But the coolest part is the black light paintings, Hardt says enthusiastically – when you turn off the lights, you get a whole different bathroom experience. It's also usually super clean, which is a good thing because black lights aren't very forgiving.


Harriett's Lounge at the Dr. Phillips Center
Named after one of Orlando's coolest philanthropists, the legendary Harriett Lake, this is the classiest bathroom in Orlando. All of the bathrooms are amazing at the Dr. Phillips Center, but this lounge, located on the first floor, is the definition of perfection. There are chandeliers, love seats, giant mirrors, the most perfect lighting for your selfie needs and – Hardt's favorite part – purse hooks by the sinks. Consider it a huge deal. Hardt says she never knew she needed hooks by the sink, and now she's pretty much forever spoiled.

PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

source: https://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/lisa-hardts-toilet-tours-might-sound-crappy-but-theyre-really-a-love-letter-to-orlando-businesses/Content?oid=15019607&storyPage=3

by Xander Peters




"We love our cartons labels by WebSticker.com."




http://www.thisoldtoilet.com

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Replacement Toilet Lids and Seats -Incredible moment massive Colorado storm sweeps a portable toilet 30ft into the air- This Old Toilet 800-658-4521



A PORTABLE toilet was filmed taking off and shooting into the sky after a bad case of wind.
The extraordinary spectacle unfolded when a powerful gust swept across a community event in Colorado - causing the loo to takeoff and fly away like a scene out of The Wizard of Oz.



Meanwhile parents and kids can be seen taking cover as rubbish and other debris flew about while a tent collapses.
Up in the sky, the toilet can be seen spraying liquid which then rains down on people in the park.
Another loo then takes off - but this time does not reach the heights as the other one and it can be seen crashing down nearby.
The video was posted to Facebook on Monday and has since racked up more than one million views.


Viewers deliberated over what could have caused the wild wind in Commerce City on what otherwise looks like a sunny day.
Some have explained the freak weather as what is known as a microburst storm, which is an intense, localised downdraft produced by a thunderstorm.
Other Facebook users could not help but laugh at the sight of a toilet cubicle rocketing into the air.

One joked: “Who got hit with that porta-potty though."



"We love our cartons labels by WebSticker.com."



source: https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/6540651/colorado-wind-storm-sweeps-portable-toilet-into-air-video/
by Patrick Knox
http://www.thisoldtoilet.com