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toilet waste

Sewage (or domestic sewage, domestic wastewater, municipal wastewater) is a type of wastewater that is produced by a community of people. It is typically transported through a sewer system.: 175  Sewage consists of wastewater discharged from residences and from commercial, institutional and public facilities that exist in the locality.: 10  Sub-types of sewage are greywater (from sinks, bathtubs, showers, dishwashers, and clothes washers) and blackwater (the water used to flush toilets, combined with the human waste that it flushes away). Sewage also contains soaps and detergents. Food waste may be present from dishwashing, and food quantities may be increased where garbage disposal units are used. In regions where toilet paper is used rather than bidets, that paper is also added to the sewage. Sewage contains macro-pollutants and micro-pollutants, and may also incorporate some municipal solid waste and pollutants from industrial wastewater.
Sewage usually travels from a building's plumbing either into a sewer, which will carry it elsewhere, or into an onsite sewage facility. Collection of sewage of several households together usually takes places in either sanitary sewers or combined sewers. The former is designed to exclude stormwater flows whereas the latter is designed to also take stormwater. The production of sewage generally corresponds to the water consumption. A range of factors influence water consumption and hence the sewage flowrates per person. These include: Water availability (the opposite of water scarcity), water supply options, climate (warmer climates may lead to greater water consumption), community size, economic level of the community, level of industrialization, metering of household consumption, water cost and water pressure.: 20 The main parameters in sewage that are measured to assess the sewage strength or quality as well as treatment options include: solids, indicators of organic matter, nitrogen, phosphorus, and indicators of fecal contamination.: 33  These can be considered to be the main macro-pollutants in sewage. Sewage contains pathogens which stem from fecal matter. The following four types of pathogens are found in sewage: pathogenic bacteria, viruses, protozoa (in the form of cysts or oocysts) and helminths (in the form of eggs). In order to quantify the organic matter, indirect methods are commonly used: mainly the Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) and the Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD).: 36 Management of sewage includes collection and transport for release into the environment, after a treatment level that is compatible with the local requirements for discharge into water bodies, onto soil or for reuse applications.: 156  Disposal options include dilution (self-purification of water bodies, making use of their assimilative capacity if possible), marine outfalls, land disposal and sewage farms. All disposal options may run risks of causing water pollution.

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  1. S

    Concertina toilet waste pipe disintegrated within days of fitting and not even in use?!

    Hello All Apologies for making my first thread a cry for help but this is perplexing! New bathroom is being installed. This morning, about 10 days since the concertina style waste pipe was fitted, the plumber let water in to the new toilet cistern and flushed it. I realised it was leaking...
  2. S

    Toilet waste pipe re location if poss

    Hi i would like to move my toilet in my bathroom so i can change the layout to get more space the waste pipe is not in the corner off the room like normal can extend the waste pipe and put a 90 bend on it i posted a drawing of where i would like it to go The green arrow would be the new waste...
  3. D

    Toilet waste advice

    Hi all, I'm new to the forum and hoping for some advice. I'm a keen DIYer and am planning to try and replace my downstairs cloakroom in the house we've just moved into with a new suite. I've replaced sinks before and changed a cistern siphon a few times, but never removed a whole toilet. I'm...
  4. A

    1930's toilet waste - Clay to PVC

    Hi- I am new to this forum, which has been to be a fantastic source of information for me, so thank you for all the useful tips. I am redoing a cloakroom in my 1930's house. The toilet waste seems to be in clay and I am looking for advice on how to connect it to PVC. See enclosed picture. I...
  5. T

    Quick fix for a leaky toilet waste?

    Hi all, I've got a customer who wants me to fix a leak where the toilet pan meets the pan connector. Of course I'd usually take out the pan and replace the connector but for a variety of reasons (rusted screws etc...) it's difficult to move so I was wondering if there was a quick fix that would...
  6. U

    Cast Iron toilet waste pipe

    Hi all, I'm currently replacing my toilet but whilst removing the waste pipe the cast iron section has broken off half way in the ground (concrete floor). Is there any was to insert new PVC piping into the existing cast iron pipe or do i need to dig down until i can reach the top of the pipe...
  7. M

    Protecting Flexible Toilet Waste from Rats/Vermin

    Hi everyone, New to the forum! Hope everyone is having some down time just before Christmas!! I have a toilet upstairs, which was put in about 4 years ago when we had an extension built. All was fine, until I noticed that the toilet was leaking. On inspection, I noticed that the toilet...
  8. N

    Toilet waste section identification

    Hi I am in process of planning a remodelling of ground floor cloakroom in a 2007 build house. I may want to move my WC from one end to the other which is distance of about 7 feet and will require slightly longer soil pipe section being run and boxed in. However I have found that this toilet...
  9. M

    First fixing toilet waste

    On a new build when First fixing the toilet waste for a close coupled toilet, on the first floor, so coming up through the floor boards in the center of where the toilet will be. Should it be brought up tight back to the wall? Will a bent pan connector reach far enough in to the room to reach...
  10. J

    cast iron toilet waste

    Hi I have a 4 1/4" dia cast iron waste. Anyone know what the wall thickness of this is likely to be? I intend to cut through this when I install a new toilet. Is a standard 110mm pan connector likely to fit. If not are other sizes readily available as I dont want to left without a pot to pee in
  11. R

    Clay to plastic toilet waste

    Hi Friends How easy is it to fit a clay to plastic toilet waste? Never seen one let alone done one!! Will the old one come off ok? Pics posted next week when I measure up. Gave a good weekend all. Rocket.
  12. A

    Toilet Waste pipe

    I live in a 1 bed 1st floor flat and we are looking to carry out some refurbishment and create a new bedroom for our baby. As part of this I want to swap the positioning of the kitchen and bathroom. We are lease holders in the building, and the landlords of the building own the bathroom shop...
  13. B

    How can I clean my main toilet waste sewer pipe? Want to check its clean

    I was very silly and flushed things I shouldn't have down my toilet. This was 5 days ago. Since then the toilet has been working fine and no blocks in the loo or the toilet backing up. I am just worried, because I dont know how clean or free and empty the toilet drain pipe outside taking all...
  14. Riley

    Re routing toilet waste pipe

    Evening all, wonder if one of you might recommend a method for re-routing a toilet waste pipe. Basically I need to move a toilet waste from one corner of a bathroom to the other. Initially customer wanted the loo in one place which ran nicely in line with the joists. Now sadly they have re...
  15. G

    Bathroom Sink and Bath plumbed to the Toilet Waste pipe ( is this normal ?)

    Hi, Could you please advise, I recently had a bathroom fitted and now several months later we have human waste backing up into the bath. The plumber has plumbed our bathroom sink and bath directly onto the waste-pipe that our toilet is connected to. Can anyone advise me if it is within the...
  16. B

    Bad smell from toilet waste - any advice?

    Wonder if anyone can help!? I'm doing my bathroom and removed my toilet a week ago. I stuffed a towel down the waste pipe, bagged it and taped it up. Thing is, the room has started to stink and I think it may be spreading. It seems to be coming out of the en suite and I think it may also be...
  17. S

    Cutting hole for toilet waste between joists

    Hi all, Newbie question, sorry if been asked before but I've searched and come up with nothing! I'm looking at buying a house but it has a seriously small bathroom (4'9" wide and 9'10" long with a chimney breast along one wall), so there is no bath in, just a shower. I think I could install a...
  18. L

    Toilet Waste pipe

    Hi can anybody explain what this is all about, first time I have seen it, and can I remove it.
  19. R

    toilet waste through floor: options?

    Cloakroom on ground floor has waste pipe exiting through concrete floor. Pipe starts 11cm from wall (so 16cm on centre). Can I get most any P trap toilet and a swan neck or flexi connector or do I have to go with the old style non-close-coupled toilets? thanks
  20. M

    Uphill toilet waste

    I am fitting a new toilet for a friend. The existing waste pipe comes out of the wall for about 75cm and then there is a 90 deg bend to pan connector. The previous toilet was a low level suite with the new one being a close coupled suite. The existing waste pipe is higher than the pan outlet and...
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