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Dual-Flush Toilets |
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How to Save Water in
the Bathroom
General:
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Don’t let the water run while brushing your
teeth, shaving, or washing your face. You’ll
save between three and five gallons of water
each minute your faucet is turned off.
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If someone in your family likes to shave with
water running in the basin, they probably use at
least one gallon per minute, most of it wasted.
A closed basin needs one-half gallon or so of
water for adequate razor rinsing.
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Little leaks add up in a hurry! A faucet drip or
invisible toilet leak that totals only two
tablespoons a minute comes to 15 gallons a day.
That’s 105 gallons a week or 5,460 wasted
gallons of water a year.
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Obtain showerheads, faucet aerators and toilet
flappers to help you
use water efficiently
Toilets:
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Stop using the
toilet as an ashtray or wastebasket. Some people
flush away tissues and other bits of trash in
the toilet. Using a wastebasket will save all
those gallons of water that otherwise go
wastefully down the drain.
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Most toilets
installed
before 1980 use 5-7 gallons of water per flush.
Toilets installed between 1980 and 1993 use 3.5
gallons per flush. Toilets installed since 1994
use 1.6 gallons. In order to conserve water in
your pre-1994 toilet you can install an early
closing toilet flapper, which are available at
participating local hardware stores. Request a
coupon from the store clerk and get a $4.00
rebate on your water bill. If you are
considering replacing your toilet, the Town of
Cary will provide a rebate of $150 per toilet to
residential and business water customers who
replace older toilets that use 3.5 gallons or
more per flush with aWaterSense-certified
high efficiency toilet (HET) that use
1.3 gallons per flush. Also, check out the
2008 Maximum Performance Testing of Popular
Toilet Models and the
Toilets Conservationists Like Best.
The
Toilet Training Tutorial has tips on
fixing leaky toilets as well as a schedule of
repair demonstrations.
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Recycle and save
water at the same time! Fill a plastic,
quart-sized milk container with water and put it
in your pre-1994 toilet tank, safely away from
the operating mechanism. The jug can displace 10
gallons or more of water a day. We do not
recommend you use a brick to displace the water.
Bricks eventually disintegrate in water and can
jam plumbing lines. Also be careful not to place
the bottles where they will jam the flushing
mechanism, and make sure you don’t displace so
much water that you have to double-flush. Double
flushing wastes more water than you would save.
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Does your toilet
ever make noises when it is not in use? A toilet
with even a small leak can greatly increase your
water bill. To check your toilet for leaks, put
a few drops of food coloring in your toilet
tank, wait 10 minutes. If, without flushing, the
color begins to appear in the bowl, you have a
leak, which should be repaired immediately.
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How long should the
parts in your toilet tank last? It depends.
Replaceable parts such as flappers and washers
or seals inside the refill valve may last
several years. However, factors such as water
treatment processes, toilet bowl cleaners, and
high water pressure can cause parts to
disintegrate much sooner. If you touch the
flapper and get black "goo" on your hands, the
flapper needs to be replaced.
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For more information
on toilets and toilet repairs, visit the
following website:
http://www.toiletology.com/
Bath/Shower:
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A
typical bath takes about 40 gallons of water.
Use the minimum amount of water needed for a
bath by closing the drain first and filling the
tub only 1/3 full. Remember to plug the tub
before turning on water; that initial burst of
cold water will be warmed later by adding hot
water.
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Limit the length of your shower to 5 minutes or
less. Reducing showering time by 1 minute can
save 1,000 gallons of water a year.
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Check your showerhead. If your showerhead uses 3
or more gallons of water per minute, it is a
prime candidate for replacement. A showerhead
designed with conservation in mind will flow at
a rate of 2.5 or less gallons per minute. These
showerheads may be stingy with water, but they
can still feel luxurious. In fact, the most
advanced showerheads on the market—the ones that
offer pulsating massages and precisely
controlled temperatures—usually are low-flow
nozzles.
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If you can bathe your whole body with a
showerhead that uses less than 2.5 gallons per
minute, why use up to 7 gallons just to wash
your hands in the sink? Unless you’ve installed
inexpensive faucet aerators in your bathroom and
kitchen taps, that’s what you are doing. An
aerator that supplies 2.5 gallons per minute
should be fine in the kitchen. In the bathroom,
a 1-gallon-per-minute aerator will provide
plenty of water to brush your teeth, wash your
hands or fill a glass for drinking.
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www.SaveOnUtilities.com.
has been developing for months. But the actual construction of this
site was begun on February 11, 2009.
The site will be THE
comprehensive site for consumers, showing them the myriad of
ways they can save on their utility expense.
This column will be available to
those wishing to advertise their utility, their product, or
their service. Contact us at:
trimutilities@aol.com
to arrange for your ad. The site will be substantially completed
within a month, but if you wait until that moment, space may
well be taken. This is the time to strike a deal for a bargain
ad. We have posted the site early for this purpose. |