I was going to return to that toilet in Beckenham with a ladder and a high vis jacket so I could show you the syphon inside the cistern, but I chickened out. So you'll have to do it yourself. Bonus points if you can find that exact public toilet. The sponsor is Henson Shaving: click this link www.hensonshaving.com/stevemould and use the code stevemould to receive 100 free blades with the purchase of your AL13 razor.
@nikkosstorychannel3 ай бұрын
Epiko
@sypernova69693 ай бұрын
hey! in canada (and the us) it`s the same type of system, although we`ve mostly done away with communal urinals, in favor of individual ones, and they all flush on their own time. actually now, they have infrared sensor and they only flush when you leave the urinal. but older ones have that same system as you describe.
@l0I0I0I03 ай бұрын
What if you want it to drain once a day, like watering plants while you are away?
@brianm63373 ай бұрын
I've seen those sort of urinals in dive bars (where it's do or die time, and anything will do the job. Ugh.). The... scenery is universal. Where you wish you could float an inch or 2 off the floor, because you *swear* your shoes are dissolving. You probably don't want to climb anywhere *near* that cistern- otherwise, we'll get a heck of a special on disease transmission...
@brianm63373 ай бұрын
Then, you do the calculations to make the system empty once a day, using proper sized pipes and tank. A little trial and error might also be involved.
@darrennew82113 ай бұрын
As a computer programmer, I always love seeing these complex mechanical designs that do complex stages of things using nothing but simple physics. The thought process it takes to create something like this fascinates me.
@Lord_zeel3 ай бұрын
Even more insane: This same sort of complex staged exploitation of physics plays out at a microscopic scale inside of a computer. It's just the flow of electricity rather than water. As a programmer it's wild to think about the absurdly complex process that is set off by high level code. What's actually happening inside the CPU billions of times per second. I'm always impressed by mechanical designs that don't rely on a computer, by the elegance of the engineering. Then I remember that that's also true of a CPU, the parts might not move around but it's the same cascade of interconnected simple components. Freaking wild.
@LucasundAaron3 ай бұрын
all complex engineering topics are wonderful
@MattH-wg7ou3 ай бұрын
I love stuff like this too!
@joz5343 ай бұрын
"Look at all the things they need to do to mimic a fraction of our power!"
@mgancarzjr3 ай бұрын
We first had to capture lightning and trap it in a rock
@Entertainment-us6gt3 ай бұрын
Here’s a tip for understanding the different layers of chambers: Instead of using a white background with blue water, try using a yellow background. This way, as the blue water fills up the chamber, you’ll see green water, making it easier to visualize the layers how the water is filling it up.
@clintsears6369Ай бұрын
That’s a brilliant idea!
@JustWasted3HoursHere3 ай бұрын
I like the fact that no physical valves, springs, flappers etc are needed for it to work. Therefore, in theory, it should last for a very long time with little to no maintenance.
@volvo093 ай бұрын
Pretty much trouble free until some minerals clog it.
@creativecarveciteclimb56843 ай бұрын
Yeah, same. That's also probably why the bathroom shown in this video is so poorly maintained 😂 Whoever thought of the fact the water itself could be a valve to block air from exiting is a genius, then executing it is even more impressive.
@No-mq5lw3 ай бұрын
Issue with most urinals is that urine is acidic, so if you have a waterless system, nothing is getting diluted so it slowly corrodes things.
@chyza20123 ай бұрын
@@No-mq5lwThere's no urine flowing through that mechanism just water
@kimcosmos3 ай бұрын
@@creativecarveciteclimb5684 Have you seen the tesla valve doing the same thing with turbulence?
@Knight83653 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this video. There's a whole community of gardeners using plain bell siphons in aquaponics who have trouble getting the siphon to trigger. Your clear explanation and visual of the system will help design better siphons and reduce these problems. Great stuff, thanks again!
@aikumaDK3 ай бұрын
Every video since the gas station pump thing has only increased my respect for the people who can work out these systems that are simultaneously simple and complex.
@repatch433 ай бұрын
Simple, complex, and most importantly: almost 100% reliable.
@Shaggyrodrigues2 ай бұрын
This is 1000 year old technology.
@iris4547Ай бұрын
its iterative. they didnt start with nothing and then suddenly produce this, they had basic systems that they combine and build upon to achieve these results.
@nes9993 ай бұрын
Midwest USA here! This is how all the fair grounds and older stadiums work! I always wondered how it worked.
@bob_._.3 ай бұрын
I can't say it's a strictly British thing but I don't recall ever seeing the urinal flush thing in my 70 years in America.
@JonBrase3 ай бұрын
37 here, and I saw it a number of times as a kid. Not in a while, though.
@kaiserruhsam3 ай бұрын
i think we have those they just hide the plumbing more and trough urinals are thankfully extinct
@evilbob8403 ай бұрын
I've seen it in a stadium in the US, but that's it.
@eh423 ай бұрын
I have definitely seen them in (Canadian) public schools back when I was young. That constant sound of water trickling... They've clearly been replaced by those electronic sensor/eye things en masse to conserve water as they were flushing all night / weekend / summer when no one is around.
@pootinhammer3 ай бұрын
I haven't seen one like that since I was a kid at a beach campground bath house, I'm 32 now, I think I was 9 years old on the camping trip I'm thinking of.
@tiagoferreira0863 ай бұрын
Whoever came with that invention was really clever, a valve and a timer with no moving parts, "very impressive". As a side note i appreciate the mrmattandmrchay channel for old elevators videos, they are fascinating in their own way.
@Manachtron3 ай бұрын
Let's see Paul Allen's siphon
@korg472373 ай бұрын
In the US, every urinal does in fact have its own flushing mechanism. Never even knew the "communal" flush design was a thing!
@bengerber55693 ай бұрын
My office has one of these communal flush mechanisms. I’m in the states
@CycFlame3 ай бұрын
You can find them in older systems here in the states, but they have fallen out of favor.
@jpkotta3 ай бұрын
The only time I see these communal flushers is at urinal troughs, which used to be more common. Sometimes you still see them in stadiums. The last time I used a trough was at First Ave in Minneapolis, though I'm not sure if it has a common flusher.
@TwoScoopsofDestroyer3 ай бұрын
My highschool had urinals that all flushed together periodically. I don't think it used a siphon though, it had a motion detector so it wouldn't flush if noone had been in the bathroom recently.
@itsyaboikirbo3 ай бұрын
busch stadium in st louis has troughs, never stuck around long enough to look for how it flushes but i would assume it is the same or similar
@joefrayling92633 ай бұрын
The combination of chill vibes elevator music and 80s adult entertainment soundtrack to the imagery of a urinal flushing mechanism at different speeds is absolutely on point Mr mould 👍.
@alfadog673 ай бұрын
I grew up in the UK, in greenham common. From there I could see a manor house. We visited the Manor House a couple of times, and one time my mom and sister walked into the bathroom and reported that the toilets were flushing automatically all at once. I didn't know what that meant, and I suspected that there was some mechanism besides the roaming ghost that my mother had reported, and now 50 years later, you've given me the answer. Thank you Steve
@CpnGoose3 ай бұрын
Hey, I used to live in Thatcham and walked around the common every week.
@alfadog673 ай бұрын
@@CpnGoose I attended Ecchinswell for grammar school!
@stepheneyles21983 ай бұрын
Only problem with that is they normally only put urinals with common flush mechanism into male toilets... I wonder if the toilets had a similar system? (But what if someone did no. 2 and wanted to flush it immediately?)
@alfadog673 ай бұрын
@@stepheneyles2198 so it WAS a ghost after all! 👻
@mixerfistit55223 ай бұрын
@@stepheneyles2198maybe 2 cysterns? One large, common one and an individual normal sized one for flush on demand
@Franjoho3 ай бұрын
This finally answers any question I had about how adding water to a urinal leads to this flushing action where the water disappears for a second and then comes back. Truly amazing!
@matthewwhite5463 ай бұрын
“Whatcha watching, honey?” “A video about urinals.”
@kjh23gk3 ай бұрын
"Again??"
@Meenaia3 ай бұрын
Did she ask when the music started playing at 9:50 ?
@Uhh.thankyou3 ай бұрын
@@Meenaia I know, so random
@Elesario3 ай бұрын
The first person was probably the gay man coming into the urinal for random fun with strangers ;)
@sterlingveil3 ай бұрын
@@kjh23gk This one has an emphasis on siphons!
@theoriginaledi3 ай бұрын
The blue fingers elevate the video. Gives a whole new meaning to "getting your hands dirty" with hard work. :D
@gdutfulkbhh75373 ай бұрын
Two by two; hands of blue...
@theoriginaledi3 ай бұрын
@@gdutfulkbhh7537 Ha!! Great reference! :D
@saurianwatcher443723 күн бұрын
I was searching the comments trying to figure out why his hands were blue. Took until I found yours to realize it was probably from the dyes he was using for the water demonstration.
@RichRauenzahn3 ай бұрын
Related, in the aquarium hobby there are overflows that the hobbyists want to keep quiet. But the shapes tend to make siphons, so there is work to do the opposite … keep the draining process quiet by encapsulating it, but engineering it so a siphon doesn’t form. “Durso standpipe” is one such design.
@logiclrd3 ай бұрын
Technically, you should have kept pouring once the siphon initiated, to show that it works even if water keeps trickling into the reservoir (as it does in an actual installation).
@backwashjoe78643 ай бұрын
That bugged me too!
@JohnnyWednesday3 ай бұрын
It empties faster than it can fill.
@logiclrd3 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesday It's the principle of the matter.
@JohnnyWednesday3 ай бұрын
@@logiclrd - You can use logic to fill in the blanks.
@logiclrd3 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesday That's not how demonstrating something in an experiment works.
@icojb253 ай бұрын
"You may know this already, but I am already a huge fan of automatic siphons ... " hahaha, what a great way to open a video.
@Supremax672 ай бұрын
I heard instead that a fast siphon doesn't exist in a 2D world.
@TristanJCumpole3 ай бұрын
If you pour too much wine into Socrates' cup, it automatically dispenses urine into his fabric conditioner rinse cycle, ruining his togas. Full success!
@sanjeen25033 ай бұрын
he'd rather drink a glass of hemlock juice than hear this crap
@lassikinnunen3 ай бұрын
Why so blue, aristotele?
@shiningarmor28383 ай бұрын
Did you know that a lot of ancient cultures used ammonia as bleach?
@AndroidNoir-L06k3 ай бұрын
@@shiningarmor2838 Using piss to clean shirt.
@poppyholly17593 ай бұрын
Pythagoras 🍷 See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_cup
@TCPUDPATM3 ай бұрын
I appreciate that you show your mistakes. Sometimes I feel stupid when I don’t get these setups right away. That’s why I tell myself - this isn’t as simple as you’re able to make it out to be lol
@Eminthepooh3 ай бұрын
Reminds me of a transistor driving another transistor called a Darlington Pair. This allows a really small/weak signal to drive a big load. Well done Steve!
@liam32843 ай бұрын
I was thinking of the Unijunction transistor, as this mechanism is a relaxation oscillator.
@hevado013 ай бұрын
@@liam3284that’s more like this indeed, the pnp+npn equivalent of a thyristor/diac Threshold + positive feedback
@62Cristoforo3 ай бұрын
Isnt that’s known in electrical systems as a relay? A small current opens a switch which carries a much larger current
@kiwihuman3 ай бұрын
@62Cristoforo no, a relay refers to an electromechanical device where a small electromagnet closes/opens a switch. It does serve the purpose you stated, however there are other ways to control a large curent/voltage that don't require relays.
@formbi3 ай бұрын
@@62Cristoforo a transistor is kinda like a semiconductor relay, but without isolation
@karhukivi3 ай бұрын
Automatic mechanical systems are so much more reliable and cheaper than ones based on electronic controls which invariably give trouble with corrosion of contacts, broken wires and batteries that have to be replaced. E.g. stairs vs lifts/escalators, ball governors vs electronic speed control systems, carburettors vs engine management control boxes, self-steering vanes vs autopilots (for yachts) etc. Thank goodness (Thomas Crapper) for the flush toilet and thank you for the efforts in making this very interesting video!
@mynewhobby63233 ай бұрын
The state of that toilet at 1:30 XD still better than the one in Greenwich near the main park gate
@zsoltlajtos65273 ай бұрын
Are those rat noises in the background?
@Soken503 ай бұрын
@@zsoltlajtos6527 That squealing is probably from the pipes as water squeezes through the tiny holes to flush the urinals.
@davemccage79183 ай бұрын
That bathroom is definitely the single most terrifying thing I’ve seen on KZbin! I have a phobia of public restrooms and I rather spend a week in Aokigahara Forest with no flashlight than 10 minutes in that bathroom. Especially when the flush happens by itself! 😱
@RCassinello3 ай бұрын
You could smell that scene through the monitor!
@markhorton85783 ай бұрын
I like how you show all your "mistakes", because they made you get a greater deapth understanding of how it works (and doesn't) and that feeds into the video. I still think a few more arrows and a more detailed explanation of what happens at the moment of "flip" occurs would be a big improvement. Reminds me of when I worked out how a proportional brake valve with loads of chambers worked many years ago. Nevertheless I still struggled and had to do a good number of replays before I got this.
@xzorby3 ай бұрын
I worked on autosiphons for ebb&flow beds in hydroponics/aquaponics. They're really fun and once you get them dialled in they are very low maintenance, because there are no moving parts. But indeed matching the sizing to the required outflow and minimum inflow can be a pain. Very interesting to see how they solved that with this multi stage siphon setup!
@Fredrovicius3 ай бұрын
I am not convinced the blades (sponsor of the video) are working well - based on the look of Steve's beard at 12:42. Maybe if you show us how well they work ;)
@bryanspitz75183 ай бұрын
It's Steve's Siphons -- a subsidiary of Mould's Models
@SafetyLucas3 ай бұрын
Just wait till he needs to cast a fungus shape. Mould's mold mold
@reidakted44163 ай бұрын
That transition was almost as smooth as the siphon action! 😄I've used Henson for about 2 years now and will never look back. I don't even use shaving cream--just right out of the shower, zip, zip.
@HunterJE3 ай бұрын
I feel like this two-layer tech really opens up the space of (mostly-)2D models of fluid-dynamic mechanisms, excited to see where we go next!
@YodaWhat3 ай бұрын
It's called 2.5d, a special case of fractal dimensions.
@frankpaine45043 ай бұрын
I can't speak for other parts of Australia, however when I had a plumbing business in Sydney with my brother we installed heaps of these in schools in the 1990s. We converted quite a few of the old pull chain, overhead, urinal cisterns to siphonage cisterns.The big advantage is no moving parts, (in the cistern) so minimal maintenance. To minimise water wasteage they were always connected to the mains supply via a check valve and an electrically operated solenoid valve with a ceiling mounted motion sensor so the cisterns would only fill and empty when it detected someone at the urinal and not while students were in class for extended periods. That toilet you filmed in is cleaner than some of the ones I've worked in.
@brandon05mn3 ай бұрын
Another 2D water video, love it!
@natehill80693 ай бұрын
I am amazed at the number of people who dont even understand a simple siphon. Have used (manual operated) siphon all my life. Used to drain my moms swimming pool for winter (and during the winter as rain re-filled it). Loved being able to walk away and know when it got low enough it would shut off but it had no motor or moving parts and used no electricity.
@Lord_zeel3 ай бұрын
I think I've maybe seen one urinal like this in the US, it was at a fair ground and was very old. Every other urinal I've encountered has its own individual flush. I assume this is so you only use water when someone has actually used it, rather than flushing it regularly regardless of how often it's used. The siphon systems seems like it would be pretty wasteful if that bathroom isn't very busy, and like it might be insufficient to prevent the place from starting to stink if it's being used heavily. It does have the advantage of being automatic, so someone can't just forget to flush. That's typically solved electronically with a motion sensor these days, but I can certainly see why someone would have wanted something automatic long before electronic sensors became possible or practical.
@reaganharder14803 ай бұрын
I wonder how hard it would be to make an entirely passive rainwater flushing system out of stone or concrete or something... can you imagine? Build the thing one day and for the next 100 years, barring drought, it's just flushing every 20 minutes or whatever. I suppose it'd be pretty hard to keep up a 20 minute flush cycle with just rainwater, but the idea of completely passive flushing is intriguing to me.
@Lord_zeel2 ай бұрын
@@reaganharder1480 Seems very doable mechanically. But rain water is so dirty, I would be worried about the whole thing being clogged up with grime and algae pretty quickly.
@PatrickWillcoxАй бұрын
That’s way too complicated for me to follow which is more a reflection of me. I love the craft and dedication to something that seems on the surface to be so esoteric. Beautiful physical illustration of physics with the two shades of blue. Youz wunna ‘em smaat kids. Bought a razor too. Thanks Steve :)
@publicacct56263 ай бұрын
A Trainspotting reference is always appreciated!
@Stoufferthecat3 ай бұрын
Came here to say exactly this. Steve's nearly at Map Men levels of niche references! 😊
@sappy4happy4483 ай бұрын
I too say, “Cheers to that!”
@informativt3 ай бұрын
Cinema version even. Tho it seems there are very many versions of that movie, so maybe it is in more versions.
@HavokTheorem3 ай бұрын
I don't have anything interesting to say besides thank you Steve, for being a great teacher and a role model for an aspiring teacher. This is a mechanism that wouldn't be possible to approach understanding in 10 minutes ever before (without a very good plumber on hand anyway), I reckon. It was very satisfying to see this maze of pipes turn into areas of pressure and flow in my mind.
@wessltov3 ай бұрын
7:12 Lol you did an inverse of the classic "I'll drill a hole to fix the leak in my hull"! It's always funny to see that happen with overthinking
@skoalsoldier3 ай бұрын
While in Czechia back in May, I used these urinals several times in one of the buildings, and was flabbergasted that it seemed to “know” when to flush. I searched for sensors. I searched for a peephole, imagining a small elderly Czech man waiting for me to relieve myself to a level where flushing was necessary. I finally decided it HAD to be associated the the water level when urine was added, but didn’t know the exact mechanism. This is amazing.
@AdriaGarriga-Alonso3 ай бұрын
I am in awe at your curiosity about tricky physical phenomena and ability to set up experiments for them. I am really impressed at the frequency with which you upload videos, *each of which* is about an unusual or counterintuitive aspect of physics AND has beautifully filmed experiments for it. Awesome job!!
@evanbarnes99843 ай бұрын
That urinal design feels like whoever originally designed it was trying to make the experience of using it as close as possible to pissing on the wall in an alley outside the pub like it's 17th century London.
@IlusysSystems3 ай бұрын
I saw one such urinal in Slovakia. It was used to very recent day. But the flushing did not work (probably for ages). When I tried t enter through the door, it was like there was invisible barrier and I could not physically pass. The smell was that strong.
@robertnewhart35473 ай бұрын
They are all like that. And their jacked up teeth. And they are still shitting in the sain. The Olympians with feces by the liter in their guts. They all stated that the water was in fact, not cleaned up. Over a billion spent and literal turds still afloat. Unreal filth. USA, I guess.
@esmeraldaweatherwaxe9703 ай бұрын
they do not have a great reputation for fixing things.. they just accept them as being broken and live in squallor. :(
@stevensmutko14083 ай бұрын
This is pretty cool I've been using a similar design in my aquaponics for a while and didn't even realize it. I built a bell syphon and made some modifications and I just realized, I somehow made exactly the same thing you just demonstrated in this video. Wild I didn't even know this already existed would have made designing mine much easier.
@radagastwiz3 ай бұрын
The only urinal that I've encountered this at here in Canada was in some of the boys' rooms in my high school (built early 20th century). To save water they'd shut off the valve about an hour after classes ended and locked the door, so if you ever stayed for late activities you had fewer bathroom options.
@88porpoise3 ай бұрын
I dont know if they shut off the urinals in my school, but for school age boys, we would have just used it anyway.
@TheSleepSteward3 ай бұрын
Canadian here. Never seen a urinal flush purely using physics. It either just goes down and empties like a normal drain (they're at waist height instead of being on the ground) or other times there's a sensor that will flush it with a surge of water when it detects a human is there, and when the human leaves, initiating a FLOOSH!
@eh423 ай бұрын
Like all good things, these mechanical devices have now been offshored to a team of low paid IT workers monitoring security cameras placed at each urinal. They use their expertise in remote desktop control to flush the urinal when one finishes using it. You can tell an operator is monitoring by the little red LED that lights up behind the smoke stained window in the control unit above the urinal.
@ehsnils3 ай бұрын
It's a low level AI, not even a human. An AI don't care about the size or shape of your apparatus.
@angiepangie9893 ай бұрын
You just gave someone a whole phobia about peeing in public 😂😂😂
@volvo093 ай бұрын
I knew someone who worked at a remote toilet flush facility. Each worker had 2 screens and could connect to as many toilets as they could handle. The more experienced workers could take care of a busy rest stop by themselves, but the newer recruits had to take on less work. They were paid by flush, and if the person manually flushed the toilet they lost that pay for being too slow.
@drunkenhobo80203 ай бұрын
I found a glassware automatic syphon in an old drawer at work and played around with it for longer than I care to admit. It's fascinating.
@Lucius_Chiaraviglio3 ай бұрын
If you're thinking of what I'm thinking of, I've seen these, in use in life science labs, even into the 2000s, and the lab I work in used to have one but never used it. They were meant for washing reusable glass pipettes, which is good from the standpoint of reducing plastic waste, but terrible from the amount of water they use, because they are nowhere near as sophisticated as shown in this video, so a fairly high input flow rate is required for them to work, which is a fair percentage of the exhaust rate, so a substantial portion of the water that goes through doesn't actually do any work cleaning the pipettes, and the top parts of them get much less soaking than the bottom parts.
@drunkenhobo80203 ай бұрын
@@Lucius_Chiaraviglio Ah, I know exactly what you mean but that's not what I was talking about. The ones I have are part of a jointed glassware set and are much smaller, made of glass and transparent. Bizarrely I can't find any photos of them on the internet, so they must be relatively rare. I imagine quite expensive too, as it's fairly intricate glassware.
@progidy73 ай бұрын
I marvel at the genius intellect that came up with this in their head and then built it by hand
@samvanasselt38743 ай бұрын
Probably the Einstein of urinals. A real genius. Hoe on earth did he/she figure this out?
@Wow-Internet-User3 ай бұрын
In Hong Kong, pretty much all the public toilets used that auto siphon. The school I went to also used those in the toilets. The ones inside more modern buildings have the IR sensor flushers, though. In contrast, I have not seen the auto siphon in Japan, only manual flushing or IR sensors. Ps: I think it is interesting to note that HK, a former colony of Britain, has very similar designs to those shown in the video, while Japan, which was not a colony, does not. It would be interesting to see if there is a correlation between being a former colony to the auto siphon usage in toilets.
@me01010010003 ай бұрын
Petition to call the 2D version the "Nebraska Siphon". Reasons: The back side looks vaguely like the American state of Nebraska, Nebraska literally means "Flat Water", and also, there's just something goofy about naming something after a forgettable place.
@uss-dh79093 ай бұрын
Don't worry Nebraskins, as a North Dakotian, I feel your pain.
@jaybingham37113 ай бұрын
What place?
@freshstat1csnow3 ай бұрын
nebraska siphon sounds like some obscure sexual act you find on the urban dictionary
@davidjennings21793 ай бұрын
@@freshstat1csnow Do you want to be the primer siphon or shall I?
@CBWP3 ай бұрын
@@uss-dh7909 like ND, but more corn... also Fargo is famous... ;) (you have to have a shovel in the van)
@SimonProctor3 ай бұрын
I remember my dad's real ale festival cooling system. The barrels had cloth sheets over them with long pipes with small holes drilled in. Then a urinal system was used to pump a flow of water through the pipes on a regular basis keeping the cloths damp. It worked really well.
@MarvinRB33 ай бұрын
So... if anyone in Beckenham finds a public toilet with a missing syphon, I have an idea where it might have got to.
@hannahwells93973 ай бұрын
I love the way you show your mistakes it shows that even the brilliant dont always get it right every time.
@clemensfocke12023 ай бұрын
Have you ever heard of the "Clock of Flowing Time " in the Berlin Europa-Center? It's a realy interesting display with loads of syphons.
@bigsmiler51013 ай бұрын
I just discovered YOU. I'm a mechanical engineer (retired) and kept wondering WHO invented this. Did he (or she) get properly compensated? While I watched I also thought, "Wow, this is similar to the old Fluidic systems." Then at the end, I see you have a video about a water computer. I haven't watched it yet but I was taught control systems, which included fluidics just as digital computers put them out of business for most industries. While in college I worked construction jobs where the business buildings had fluidic HVAC systems. They definitely have some advantages. -- I'll be seeing you again. 😃
@Richardincancale3 ай бұрын
10:10 That’s great music for hanging around in men’s toilets with a camera! 😅 The good old days of cottaging!
@backwashjoe78643 ай бұрын
"for handing around in men's toilets" LOL! At first I thought that was a Freudian slip, and you meant "hanging around", but then I googled "cottaging"!
@Richardincancale3 ай бұрын
@@backwashjoe7864 Oops!
@bird20023 ай бұрын
I had already purchased the Henson AL13 and it really is a game changer. I don't get ingrown hairs anymore. Great video by the way.
@PrecludeLP3 ай бұрын
I don't normally comment on sponsors but I've had my AL13 medium for a couple of years now and I love it.
@williamwood85493 ай бұрын
2:05 - how did you know about my dribbling problem? Who blabbed?
@rodox_sk83 ай бұрын
The reference to the movie Trainspotting was one of the most unexpected things, but honestly, I loved it, this movie marked my adolescence hahaha❤🇧🇷
@VikingTeddy3 ай бұрын
I really want to see him climbing out of the bowl now.
@MozzaBurger883 ай бұрын
When he spoke of the worst toilet in Beckenham I immediately thought about that movie. KZbin didn't disappoint 😁
@thomasrogers82393 ай бұрын
Are you okay as a person? Trainspotting has nothing to do with trains...
@VikingTeddy3 ай бұрын
@@thomasrogers8239 I'm not sure what you're trying to say? Why wouldn't he know what the movie is about?
@freshrockpapa-e77993 ай бұрын
@@thomasrogers8239 I'm pretty sure if that movie marked their adolescence they definitely have seen it and know what it's about.
@TalRohan3 ай бұрын
I built one of these to make an old bath into a garden pond filter, it took a bit of tuning but it worked like a dream as a hydroponic system to filter my pond and grow various plants
@alexbennie3 ай бұрын
Choose life, choose a washing machine, choose a **** colour TV... I know what's on my playlist for the weekend! Loved the reference! Thank you
@ImBarryScottCSS3 ай бұрын
It's a compound syphon, you see these sometimes in the traps of condensing boilers to quickly remove waste water colllected from the flue that accumulates very slowly.
@DanielTaber-p7f3 ай бұрын
I have never seen a urinal that flushes periodically
@JohnnyWednesday3 ай бұрын
When did you think they flush? never?
@MaddSpazz20003 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesdayyou don't have to flush urinals in the US
@JohnnyWednesday3 ай бұрын
@@MaddSpazz2000 - you just let the urine dry on the ceramic?
@abc321meins3 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesday Well usually urinals have some kind of sensor that flushes them automatically when you leave. Isn’t this a huge waste of fresh water?
@JohnnyWednesday3 ай бұрын
@@abc321meins - Oh I see what you mean - no this is Britain, the one thing we never lack is fresh water. It rains so much that we're immune to waterboarding.
@jaycal19202 ай бұрын
Steve is like that Physics teacher you look forward to going to class for. I think most physics teachers are cool.
@glockparaastra3 ай бұрын
I too hate that dribbling problem 😂 Great video as always!
@brianm63373 ай бұрын
Have you tried super glue? 🫣😬😁
@beemoh3 ай бұрын
I feel "Steve Mould solves his urinal dribbling problem" seems like a better name for this video
@ArchangelExile3 ай бұрын
You should see a doctor about that.
@walderlopes33723 ай бұрын
@@ArchangelExile I know it is a light-hearted banter reply, but no joke for a moment. If at any age, but more commonly above 50, you have dribbling problems, that may be a sign of something wrong with that gosh-darned prostate.
@eboarini113 ай бұрын
I know some others mentioned this, but you gotta keep the water running while draining to reflect real world install. This also introduces another variable in the ratio between in and out flow and how tuning those two affects function. :) Also, you can fix your original, more simple, siphon by adding a 90 degree bend at the outlet with an outfeed pipe. Anything more than 90 degrees will introduce hydraulics, which will create inconsistency. And you say no moving parts, but a pump has to create pressure in the lines. Unless we’re talking about a rain fed, gravity pressured urinal. Sorry if this reads as critical… this video was just super interesting to me as I’ve puzzled over this exact problem with hydroponic gardening. Huge fan and love your videos!
@Erik_Taurus3 ай бұрын
1:17 "Oh, me? I'm just here to look at the urinal siphoning!"
@Lampe20203 ай бұрын
9:46 Is the syphon so sexy? Or why that music?
@slimjim25843 ай бұрын
For all the women watching this who have never seen the inside of men's restroom: this system is used above a large trough because the men are too drunk to aim. I cannot speak to the rest of the world, but in the US it mainly exists in bars and some public event venues, most places have individual stalls.
@2000jago3 ай бұрын
I use a straight edge razor for years now. Never clogs, never needs a new blade, doesn't matter how long it's been since the last shave. Just a few strokes on the strop and you're good to go. Yes, it takes a little time to get used to, but you'll never have a better shave than what can be achieved with a "cut throat" razor and some patience. The whole experience is quite "zen" too...
@Zieg7773 ай бұрын
I wasnt expecting Grian to put me on hold during a Steve Mould video at 10:30
@BluPersonn3 ай бұрын
Bruhh
@redpheonix10003 ай бұрын
9:27 _Through the magic of buying two of them..._
@spencers41213 ай бұрын
1:16 "if you spend long enough at a urinal" Either see a doctor, or I hope the police catch you.
@automotivetales3 ай бұрын
Fricking love a new Steve Mould video! Such a simple everyday device we take for granted… who knew it was so blinking complicated!!!
@socomfan43 ай бұрын
10:00 classic 80s retro porno music. Quality music taste
@Jeff-dx3ql3 ай бұрын
Steve, I absolutely love the Henson safety razor! I bought it in December last year and have changed to my second blade just recently. Great suggestion! Thank you for it!
@tabletopstudios35503 ай бұрын
At this point Steve is gonna start the next great flood
@jaybeemhardscrote74663 ай бұрын
Next?
@-beee-Ай бұрын
There’s so much elegant engineering all around us! It’s so cool learning about all the magic tricks in the world
@kbsanders3 ай бұрын
11:09 Looks like a giant slug.
@hoveringgoat80613 ай бұрын
I've often wondered how a toilet worked but never been quite curious enough to look it up. This is actually a lot more interesting than i thought. Very cool.
@randbarrett8706Ай бұрын
1:18 no, I am not familiar with the moment all the urinals start flushing
@62Cristoforo3 ай бұрын
Even though I don’t fully grasp the exact processes I do appreciate the level of concentration and genius required by whomever designed this device.
@whig013 ай бұрын
Water transistor?
@Helperbot-20007 күн бұрын
That was my first thought too
@hedgeearthridge68073 ай бұрын
In the US I've only seen the motion sensor urinals (which always break and either flush constantly or never), or the manual flush ones (which most nasty people never flush and causes rotting pee smell). There's supposedly waterless ones that smell awful and destroy themselves due to mineral deposits. So the automatic siphon really sounds like an elegant solution
@khaitomretro3 ай бұрын
Why are you using sanitary towel fluid in your syphon?
@Anonymous-df8it3 ай бұрын
lol
@awkwardsilence442717 күн бұрын
1:39 Don’t know about the rest of the world, but the US definitely doesn’t have that. In fact, we don’t have that kind of massive urinal; all of ours are individual units. The only thing I recall that comes close to it are these trough looking ones that are at my nearby renaissance fair, and I’m not even sure if it has a flushing mechanism at all or not. Edit: Actually, nevermind; thinking about it, I think my local fairgrounds has (or at least had) that communal urinal. Weird that they’re both at places with the word “fair” in them.
@TylerLinner3 ай бұрын
I have only seen US communal urinals at large parks and state fairgrounds, but I've never noticed the flushing mechanism. Very cool to watch it happen!
@wobblysauce3 ай бұрын
Interesting for sure, and the little changes between the working and bloody machine are so fine.
@gerac3 ай бұрын
I think I can use some of these concepts to build an automatic system to water my carnivorous plants. I need it to trigger when the water level is low, and stop when it reaches the high level. Thanks for the inspiration!!
@anshusharma15233 ай бұрын
As always, your videos are a delight to watch irrespective of whether or not at the first go, I am able to comprehend it completely or not!
@danielvest96023 ай бұрын
I've only seen a few examples of this in the US, mostly at national parks, campsites and other places where water infrastructure is absent and replaced by rooftop rain cisterns.
@petersage51573 ай бұрын
Nicely illustrated and explained. Big Clive did a teardown and analysis of one of these a few years ago, but this video goes into a little more depth.
@viktorakhmedov34423 ай бұрын
Joe Louis Arena in Detroit had these. I now have one of them in my basement. I toss ice in there and serve beer for guests. It's been fully cleaned, no worries there. My local bar also dumps ice in their troughs on the weekends, it's a nice touch. I like the sound of the ice cubes cracking from the heat.
@Paradox460_yt3 ай бұрын
This type of urinal is a lot more common in very sporadic heavy use institutional bathrooms. Think stadiums, ballparks, highschools, etc. They'll typically turn the water off during periods of minimal or no use, which is part of why these bathrooms typically reek; some person will use one during a period when the cistern is not operational, and the urine will sit in the sump of the urinal until the next time the cistern is turned on. In the case of schools or ballparks, during the off season, that period can be several months
@LKDesign3 ай бұрын
What a wonderful demonstration of a beautiful mechanism! Thank you very much!
@resipsaloquitur133 ай бұрын
Excelent urinal selection. And no. Its not just GB- Nasty is everywhere.
@thearkedcrown3 ай бұрын
They are in the US. I've traveled all over the country. They are very rare and usually used in bathrooms with high foot traffic. I've seen them in stadiums and at public parks. I think they were intended to reduce cleaning costs or maintenance visits during a particular time period because it seems like most of them were installed before 1990. Based on they way I remember them looking, it seems like they were common in the 60s and 70s, and most of them I've come across are in the midwest and western US.
@Gameboygenius3 ай бұрын
Been waiting for this ever since Big Clive covered these syphons.
@stevewolfe60963 ай бұрын
Another fascinating demo of analog design. It reminded me of the flush valve in the American Standard “Activate” touchless toilet models - a clever design that unfortunately failed to love up to its promises in the consumer environment.
@davidvwilliamson3 ай бұрын
you can get valves that automatically sense if anyone in a building is using water; if no-one does for a certain length of time then the valve automatically shuts off the supply to the automatic urinal flushers. It works purely mechanically, like the urinal flusher itself