US3131402A - Toilet bowl with hydraulic leveling upward rim feed from lowered flush valve - Google Patents
Toilet bowl with hydraulic leveling upward rim feed from lowered flush valve Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US3131402A US3131402A US267492A US26749263A US3131402A US 3131402 A US3131402 A US 3131402A US 267492 A US267492 A US 267492A US 26749263 A US26749263 A US 26749263A US 3131402 A US3131402 A US 3131402A
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- United States
- Prior art keywords
- rim
- tank
- water
- flushing
- bowl
- Prior art date
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- Expired - Lifetime
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Classifications
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E03—WATER SUPPLY; SEWERAGE
- E03D—WATER-CLOSETS OR URINALS WITH FLUSHING DEVICES; FLUSHING VALVES THEREFOR
- E03D11/00—Other component parts of water-closets, e.g. noise-reducing means in the flushing system, flushing pipes mounted in the bowl, seals for the bowl outlet, devices preventing overflow of the bowl contents; devices forming a water seal in the bowl after flushing, devices eliminating obstructions in the bowl outlet or preventing backflow of water and excrements from the waterpipe
- E03D11/02—Water-closet bowls ; Bowls with a double odour seal optionally with provisions for a good siphonic action; siphons as part of the bowl
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E03—WATER SUPPLY; SEWERAGE
- E03D—WATER-CLOSETS OR URINALS WITH FLUSHING DEVICES; FLUSHING VALVES THEREFOR
- E03D1/00—Water flushing devices with cisterns ; Setting up a range of flushing devices or water-closets; Combinations of several flushing devices
- E03D1/24—Low-level flushing systems
- E03D1/26—Bowl with flushing cistern mounted on the rearwardly extending end of the bowl
- E03D1/266—Bowl with flushing cistern mounted on the rearwardly extending end of the bowl exclusively provided with flushing valves as flushing mechanisms
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E03—WATER SUPPLY; SEWERAGE
- E03D—WATER-CLOSETS OR URINALS WITH FLUSHING DEVICES; FLUSHING VALVES THEREFOR
- E03D2201/00—Details and methods of use for water closets and urinals not otherwise provided for
- E03D2201/30—Water injection in siphon for enhancing flushing
Definitions
- This invention relates to sanitary toilet bowls. Its general object is to provide a bowl that will accommodate a tank of reduced heighth and with improved, silenced flushing mechanism.
- a specific object is to provide a toilet bowl which, in a tank and bowl combination, provides a very substantial reduction in over-all heighth and has an improved streamlined appearance.
- the invention provides an improved toilet bowl having a tank positioned at a lower level than in conventional bowls.
- a further object is to provide a toilet bowl and tank assembly wherein improved silentness of flushing is achieved by locating the fiush valve at a level below the level of the bowl rim such as to provide direct communication between the tank outlet and a body of water nor mally standing in the tank-supporting flange of the bowl,
- the invention provides a toilet bowl and tank asesmbly wherein the tank outlet is located at a level at least as low as the level of water normally standing in the bowl, and communicates directly with a body of water normally standing in the lower end of a rimsupply duct extending upwardly therefrom, thereby avoiding any trapped air between the tank outlet and said standing body of water, whereby improved quietness of flushing operation is attained.
- FIG. 1 is a perspective View of a toilet bowl unit embodying my invention
- FIG. 2 is a side elevational view of the same with the bowl shown in section in its median longitudinal vertical plane;
- FIG. 3 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view illustrating the flow of flushing water from the tank outlet to the rim duct.
- a sanitary toilet assembly comprising, in general, a bowl A having a conventional seat and cover assembly B; and a flushing tank unit C mounted upon a recessed flange portion at the back of the bowl A.
- the bowl A which may be of cast ceramic material 3,131,402 Patented May 5 1964 in accordance with conventional practice, comprises a base it) for mounting the bowl upon a floor surface 11 and having a bottom outlet 12 for connection to a soil pipe 13; a bowl body 14 above the base Ill and having a rim 15 defining a rim flushing duct 16 with flushing apertures 117 in the inward under shoulder thereof; a siphoning trapway comprising a rising portion 19 extending upwardly and rearwardly from a well-hole 18 in the bottom of the bowl, a descending portion 20 extending downwardly and having a choke 20' for retarding flow until the trapway is filled, to start siphoning action, and a portion 21 extending forwardly and terminating in the outlet 12; and a jet-flush pipe 22 extending along one side of the bowl and terminating in a jet aperture 23 in the one side of the bowl just above the well hole 18, for injecting flush water into the bowl with a vortex action.
- the pipe 22 may be formed as an integral outwardly bulged portion of one of the side walls of the base portion Iii, the trapway 19, 20 and the well-hole 27 of the bowl, as shown in FIG. 1. At its rear end, pipe 22 has an inlet 24 in the side wall of a coupling flange 26.
- the tank unit C is seated upon a horizontal shelf 25 constituting the top of the coupling flange 26, which is integral with the trapway 19, 20 and may be of the same width, the rear wall of trapway 19, 20 constituting an integral forward wall of flange 26 and the side walls of flange 216 being formed as integral co-planar rearward extensions of the side walls of duct 20 as indicated in FIG. 4.
- Flange 26 defines a plenum chamber 27 which, when the flush valve is opened, receives the discharge water from tank unit C, and distributes it forwardly through the jet pipe 22 to the trapway 19 and upwardly through a rim-supply duct 28 to the rim duct 16.
- the forward wall of rim-supply duct 28 is defined by the upward portion of the rear wall of trapway 19, 20; the rear wall 29 of rim-supply duct 28 is a fiat, vertical Wall extended upwardly from shelf 25 with a suitably curved connecting portion as shown, and the side walls 30 of rim-supply duct 23 are integral upward extensions of the side walls of trapway 19, 2t? as indicated at 30 in FIG. 4.
- the upper end of rim-supply duct 28 terminates in a head chamber 31 which constitutes an enlarged portion of the rim duct 1% at the rear end thereof and which functions to distribute the flush water to both sidesof the rim ductl'.
- Tank C has in its bottom 35 an outlet 36 defined by a fitting which is seated in and suitably sealed to an inlet spud 37 in the supporting shelf 25.
- a conventional flush valve 38 is adapted to seat in the outlet 36 to normally retain the flush water in the tank C.
- the valve 38 is adapted to be lifted by conventional valve-operating mechanism triggered by depression of the valve handle 39 (FIG. 2) and adapted to hold the valve 38 in a raised position until the tank is emptied, and to then drop it back into seating position in the outlet 36.
- the raising of the valve permits the water to flow by gravity from the tank C into the plenum chamber 27, thence forwardly through the jet pipe 22 as indicated by arrow 41, and upwardly through rim-supply duct 28 as indicated by arrows 42, thence into the rim duct 16 and downwardly through the rim apertures 17 as indicated by arrows 43.
- the tank outlet 36 instead of discharging almost directly into the rim duct as in the conventional toilet, discharges into the enlarged plenum chamber 27 which, together with the extended distance from this plenum chamber vertically upwardly to the rim duct 16, mufiles and reduces the noise of flow of the water from the tank outlet to the rim duct, where most of the noise in the conventional toilet is developed.
- the flushing noise of the ordinary toilet is due principally to the trapped air rising through the water that is descending into an air-filled chamber from the tank outlet. I largely eliminate this condition by locating the trapped air above the column of flush water, which moves upwardly in order to feed the rim-flush duct, rather than downwardly in the conventional toilet. Thus I avoid the burbling eflect of downwardly moving water and upwardly moving, displaced air in the conventional toilet installation, and eliminate a major percentage of the resulting noise.
- the extended flushing operation in the bowl 14 following the cessation of flushing in the rim duct 16, increases the efficiency of the toilet in discharging the last remnants of sewage material through the trapway 1921.
- the column of water filling the trapway 19, 20 operates with the conventional siphoning action to complete the emptying of the bowl 14 until the water seal is broken at the lower end of outlet duct 18, thus breaking the siphoning action.
- a tank a toilet bowl having a flushing rim, a well hole, a siphoning trapway and a jet pipe for vortex flushing of said well hole; a flushing system including a plenum chamber receiving water from said tank and delivering it to said jet pipe, and a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber to deliver water to said flushing rim with a quiet upward flow; said tank having a gravity flow outlet connected to said plenum chamber and a flush valve normally closing said outlet; said outlet being disposed substantially below the level of said flushing rim and in contact with a body of water normally standing in said plenum chamber, without air gap therebetween.
- a toilet bowl comprising: a bowl body having a well hole, a flushing jet pipe for vortex flushing of said well hole, and a tubular rim providing a duct for rimfiushing; a siphoning trapway extending upwardly and rearwardly from said well hole and thence downwardly, the upper extremity of said trapway determining the water line in the bowl; a water-distribution coupling flange projecting from the back side of said trapway; a horizontal shelf defining the upper extremity of said flange and providing a support for the bottom of a tank having a bottom outlet, said shelf having an inlet spud connected to said bottom outlet at the level of said water line; said flange defining a plenum chamber communicating with said jet pipe and normally holding a body of water in direct communication with said inlet spud; a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber behind said trapway and communicating with said rim-flushing duct for delivering upward flow of water thereto
- a toilet bowl comprising a bowl body; a tubular rim providing a duct for rim-flushing; means for supporting a separate flush water tank with its outlet at a level below said rim duct; means providing a plenum chamber for normally holding a standing body of water in which said outlet is submerged; and a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber and connected to said rim duct at the back of the bowl, whereby water discharged from the bottom of said tank into said connection will flow into said plenum chamber and thence upwardly into said rim duct with a quiet flow.
Description
M y 1964 H. B. ROBERTS 3,131,402
TOILET BOWL WITH HYDRAULIC LEVELING UPWARD RIM FEED FROM LOWERED FLUSH VALVE Filed March 25, 1963 Arman/2;,
United States Patent Ofiice rorrnr newt wrrri nvnnaurrc LEVELENG WWARD RIM FEED FRQM LGWJERED FLUH VALVE Herbert B. Roberts, Studio City, assigner to Western Pottery Company, ind, lliollydale, Cahii, a corporation of California Filed Mar. 25, 1963, Ser. No. 267,492 7 Claims. (Cl. 4-44) This invention relates to sanitary toilet bowls. Its general object is to provide a bowl that will accommodate a tank of reduced heighth and with improved, silenced flushing mechanism. A specific object is to provide a toilet bowl which, in a tank and bowl combination, provides a very substantial reduction in over-all heighth and has an improved streamlined appearance. .More specifically, the invention provides an improved toilet bowl having a tank positioned at a lower level than in conventional bowls.
A further object is to provide a toilet bowl having flushing mechanism of improved quietness in operation. More specifically, the invention aims to provide an improved method of controlling the flow of water into the rim duct and into the well hole of the bowl so as to achieve improved quietness.
A further object is to provide a toilet bowl and tank assembly wherein improved silentness of flushing is achieved by locating the fiush valve at a level below the level of the bowl rim such as to provide direct communication between the tank outlet and a body of water nor mally standing in the tank-supporting flange of the bowl,
with no air trapped therebetween, and by utilizing a gravity and hydraulic leveling flow for supplying water from this valve both to the rim and to the well hole of the bowl free of intermingled air which normally causes noise. I find that by controlling the flow of water to the rim flushing duct from a level below the rim level and causing the water to rise from the tank outlet to the rim flushing duct, that improved quietness is obtained.
A still further object is to combine the features of low heighth, compactness and quiet operation in a toilet bowl of the reverse trap type.
More specifically, the invention provides a toilet bowl and tank asesmbly wherein the tank outlet is located at a level at least as low as the level of water normally standing in the bowl, and communicates directly with a body of water normally standing in the lower end of a rimsupply duct extending upwardly therefrom, thereby avoiding any trapped air between the tank outlet and said standing body of water, whereby improved quietness of flushing operation is attained.
The objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent in the ensuin specification and appended drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective View of a toilet bowl unit embodying my invention;
FIG. 2 is a side elevational view of the same with the bowl shown in section in its median longitudinal vertical plane;
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view illustrating the flow of flushing water from the tank outlet to the rim duct; and
FIG. 4 is a fragmentary rear elevational view of the toilet assembly.
Referring now to the drawings in detail, I have shown therein, as an example of one form in which the invention may be embodied, a sanitary toilet assembly comprising, in general, a bowl A having a conventional seat and cover assembly B; and a flushing tank unit C mounted upon a recessed flange portion at the back of the bowl A.
The bowl A, which may be of cast ceramic material 3,131,402 Patented May 5 1964 in accordance with conventional practice, comprises a base it) for mounting the bowl upon a floor surface 11 and having a bottom outlet 12 for connection to a soil pipe 13; a bowl body 14 above the base Ill and having a rim 15 defining a rim flushing duct 16 with flushing apertures 117 in the inward under shoulder thereof; a siphoning trapway comprising a rising portion 19 extending upwardly and rearwardly from a well-hole 18 in the bottom of the bowl, a descending portion 20 extending downwardly and having a choke 20' for retarding flow until the trapway is filled, to start siphoning action, and a portion 21 extending forwardly and terminating in the outlet 12; and a jet-flush pipe 22 extending along one side of the bowl and terminating in a jet aperture 23 in the one side of the bowl just above the well hole 18, for injecting flush water into the bowl with a vortex action.
The pipe 22 may be formed as an integral outwardly bulged portion of one of the side walls of the base portion Iii, the trapway 19, 20 and the well-hole 27 of the bowl, as shown in FIG. 1. At its rear end, pipe 22 has an inlet 24 in the side wall of a coupling flange 26.
The tank unit C is seated upon a horizontal shelf 25 constituting the top of the coupling flange 26, which is integral with the trapway 19, 20 and may be of the same width, the rear wall of trapway 19, 20 constituting an integral forward wall of flange 26 and the side walls of flange 216 being formed as integral co-planar rearward extensions of the side walls of duct 20 as indicated in FIG. 4. Flange 26 defines a plenum chamber 27 which, when the flush valve is opened, receives the discharge water from tank unit C, and distributes it forwardly through the jet pipe 22 to the trapway 19 and upwardly through a rim-supply duct 28 to the rim duct 16. The forward wall of rim-supply duct 28 is defined by the upward portion of the rear wall of trapway 19, 20; the rear wall 29 of rim-supply duct 28 is a fiat, vertical Wall extended upwardly from shelf 25 with a suitably curved connecting portion as shown, and the side walls 30 of rim-supply duct 23 are integral upward extensions of the side walls of trapway 19, 2t? as indicated at 30 in FIG. 4. The upper end of rim-supply duct 28 terminates in a head chamber 31 which constitutes an enlarged portion of the rim duct 1% at the rear end thereof and which functions to distribute the flush water to both sidesof the rim ductl'. v,
Tank C has in its bottom 35 an outlet 36 defined by a fitting which is seated in and suitably sealed to an inlet spud 37 in the supporting shelf 25. A conventional flush valve 38 is adapted to seat in the outlet 36 to normally retain the flush water in the tank C. The valve 38 is adapted to be lifted by conventional valve-operating mechanism triggered by depression of the valve handle 39 (FIG. 2) and adapted to hold the valve 38 in a raised position until the tank is emptied, and to then drop it back into seating position in the outlet 36. The raising of the valve permits the water to flow by gravity from the tank C into the plenum chamber 27, thence forwardly through the jet pipe 22 as indicated by arrow 41, and upwardly through rim-supply duct 28 as indicated by arrows 42, thence into the rim duct 16 and downwardly through the rim apertures 17 as indicated by arrows 43.
In considering the operation of the apparatus, it should be first noticed that nearly /2 of the height of the normal water level (so designated in FIG. 2) above the bottom of tank C is disposed below the rim-flush level (or the rim-flush apertures 17) and the remainder of the height is above that level. The gravity operation of the upper /2 of the body of water is effective to produce the upward flow 42 from the plenum chamber 27 into the rim duct 16. The tank outlet 36, instead of discharging almost directly into the rim duct as in the conventional toilet, discharges into the enlarged plenum chamber 27 which, together with the extended distance from this plenum chamber vertically upwardly to the rim duct 16, mufiles and reduces the noise of flow of the water from the tank outlet to the rim duct, where most of the noise in the conventional toilet is developed.
The flushing noise of the ordinary toilet is due principally to the trapped air rising through the water that is descending into an air-filled chamber from the tank outlet. I largely eliminate this condition by locating the trapped air above the column of flush water, which moves upwardly in order to feed the rim-flush duct, rather than downwardly in the conventional toilet. Thus I avoid the burbling eflect of downwardly moving water and upwardly moving, displaced air in the conventional toilet installation, and eliminate a major percentage of the resulting noise.
The extended flushing operation in the bowl 14 following the cessation of flushing in the rim duct 16, increases the efficiency of the toilet in discharging the last remnants of sewage material through the trapway 1921. At the end of the flushing operation, the column of water filling the trapway 19, 20 operates with the conventional siphoning action to complete the emptying of the bowl 14 until the water seal is broken at the lower end of outlet duct 18, thus breaking the siphoning action.
I claim:
1. In combination: a tank; a toilet bowl having a flushing rim, a well hole, a siphoning trapway and a jet pipe for vortex flushing of said well hole; a flushing system including a plenum chamber receiving water from said tank and delivering it to said jet pipe, and a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber to deliver water to said flushing rim with a quiet upward flow; said tank having a gravity flow outlet connected to said plenum chamber and a flush valve normally closing said outlet; said outlet being disposed substantially below the level of said flushing rim and in contact with a body of water normally standing in said plenum chamber, without air gap therebetween.
i 2. The combination defined in claim 1, wherein sai outlet is positioned substantially at the water line in said bowl.
3. The combination defined in claim 1, wherein approximately one half of the head of water in said tank is disposed below the level of said flushing rim, and the balance of said head is above said level.
.4. A toilet bowl comprising: a bowl body having a well hole, a flushing jet pipe for vortex flushing of said well hole, and a tubular rim providing a duct for rimfiushing; a siphoning trapway extending upwardly and rearwardly from said well hole and thence downwardly, the upper extremity of said trapway determining the water line in the bowl; a water-distribution coupling flange projecting from the back side of said trapway; a horizontal shelf defining the upper extremity of said flange and providing a support for the bottom of a tank having a bottom outlet, said shelf having an inlet spud connected to said bottom outlet at the level of said water line; said flange defining a plenum chamber communicating with said jet pipe and normally holding a body of water in direct communication with said inlet spud; a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber behind said trapway and communicating with said rim-flushing duct for delivering upward flow of water thereto, the flow of water from said inlet spud into said plenum chamber being free of commingled air and therefore quiet; said shelf and tank outlet being located approximately at the level of said water line whereby said plenum chamber is normally filled with water in direct communication with said tank outlet and mixing of air with the flushing flow from said outlet, is avoided.
5. The combination defined in claim 4, wherein said rim supply duct has a vertical rear wall extending upwardly from said coupling flange and abutting the front of said tank.
6. A toilet bowl as defined in claim 4, wherein said shelf is disposed below said rim a distance equal to approximately one half the water head in said tank.
7. A toilet bowl comprising a bowl body; a tubular rim providing a duct for rim-flushing; means for supporting a separate flush water tank with its outlet at a level below said rim duct; means providing a plenum chamber for normally holding a standing body of water in which said outlet is submerged; and a rim supply duct extending upwardly from said plenum chamber and connected to said rim duct at the back of the bowl, whereby water discharged from the bottom of said tank into said connection will flow into said plenum chamber and thence upwardly into said rim duct with a quiet flow.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,670,326 Teahen May 22, 1928 1,748,197 Tilden Feb. 25, 1930 2,013,231 Bonner Sept. 3, 1935 2,028,468 Murphy J an. 21, 1936 FOREIGN PATENTS 496,157 Great Britain Nov. 25, 1938
Claims (1)
1. IN COMBINATION: A TANK; A TOILET BOWL HAVING A FLUSHING RIM, A WELL HOLE, A SIPHONING TRAPWAY AND A JET PIPE FOR VORTEX FLUSHING OF SAID WELL HOLE; A FLUSHING SYSTEM INCLUDING A PLENUM CHAMBER RECEIVING WATER FROM SAID TANK AND DELIVERING IT TO SAID JET PIPE, AND A RIM SUPPLY DUCT EXTENDING UPWARDLY FROM SAID PLENUM CHAMBER TO DELIVER WATER TO SAID FLUSHING RIM WITH A QUIET UPWARD FLOW; SAID TANK HAVING A GRAVITY FLOW OUTLET CONNECTED TO
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US267492A US3131402A (en) | 1963-03-25 | 1963-03-25 | Toilet bowl with hydraulic leveling upward rim feed from lowered flush valve |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US267492A US3131402A (en) | 1963-03-25 | 1963-03-25 | Toilet bowl with hydraulic leveling upward rim feed from lowered flush valve |
Publications (1)
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US3131402A true US3131402A (en) | 1964-05-05 |
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Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US267492A Expired - Lifetime US3131402A (en) | 1963-03-25 | 1963-03-25 | Toilet bowl with hydraulic leveling upward rim feed from lowered flush valve |
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Cited By (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4145772A (en) * | 1977-07-11 | 1979-03-27 | Trayco, Inc. | Plastic toilet |
JPS5919678U (en) * | 1982-07-30 | 1984-02-06 | 株式会社イナックス | Toilet bowl with holes |
US5054133A (en) * | 1989-04-26 | 1991-10-08 | Masco Corporatiopn Of Indiana | Low water consumption toilet fixture |
US5218726A (en) * | 1991-08-09 | 1993-06-15 | Kohler Co. | Water conserving toilet |
US5283913A (en) * | 1993-04-19 | 1994-02-08 | Kohler Co. | Water conserving toilet |
US5926863A (en) * | 1993-04-06 | 1999-07-27 | Toto Ltd. | Low flush volume toilet |
US20140259351A1 (en) * | 2013-03-14 | 2014-09-18 | Kohler Co. | Wall-hung toilet |
WO2016153772A1 (en) * | 2015-03-05 | 2016-09-29 | Fluidmaster, Inc. | Toilet hydraulic system |
US10961694B2 (en) * | 2018-07-12 | 2021-03-30 | Kohler Co. | Toilet with efficient water flow path |
US11047123B2 (en) | 2018-11-16 | 2021-06-29 | Kohler Co. | Gravity-fed toilet with quiet siphonic flush |
Citations (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1670326A (en) * | 1927-11-21 | 1928-05-22 | James M Teahen | Flushing device for water-closets |
US1748197A (en) * | 1929-10-15 | 1930-02-25 | B O T Mfg Co | Water-closet bowl |
US2013231A (en) * | 1934-03-20 | 1935-09-03 | Jr James M Bonner | Depressed tank construction for water closets |
US2028468A (en) * | 1934-08-22 | 1936-01-21 | August F Maurer | Water closet construction |
GB496157A (en) * | 1937-11-25 | 1938-11-25 | Lehmann Hans | Improvements in and relating to water-closets |
-
1963
- 1963-03-25 US US267492A patent/US3131402A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1670326A (en) * | 1927-11-21 | 1928-05-22 | James M Teahen | Flushing device for water-closets |
US1748197A (en) * | 1929-10-15 | 1930-02-25 | B O T Mfg Co | Water-closet bowl |
US2013231A (en) * | 1934-03-20 | 1935-09-03 | Jr James M Bonner | Depressed tank construction for water closets |
US2028468A (en) * | 1934-08-22 | 1936-01-21 | August F Maurer | Water closet construction |
GB496157A (en) * | 1937-11-25 | 1938-11-25 | Lehmann Hans | Improvements in and relating to water-closets |
Cited By (16)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4145772A (en) * | 1977-07-11 | 1979-03-27 | Trayco, Inc. | Plastic toilet |
JPS5919678U (en) * | 1982-07-30 | 1984-02-06 | 株式会社イナックス | Toilet bowl with holes |
JPH0144616Y2 (en) * | 1982-07-30 | 1989-12-22 | ||
US5054133A (en) * | 1989-04-26 | 1991-10-08 | Masco Corporatiopn Of Indiana | Low water consumption toilet fixture |
US5218726A (en) * | 1991-08-09 | 1993-06-15 | Kohler Co. | Water conserving toilet |
US5926863A (en) * | 1993-04-06 | 1999-07-27 | Toto Ltd. | Low flush volume toilet |
US5283913A (en) * | 1993-04-19 | 1994-02-08 | Kohler Co. | Water conserving toilet |
US10738454B2 (en) * | 2013-03-14 | 2020-08-11 | Kohler Co. | Wall-hung toilet |
US20140259351A1 (en) * | 2013-03-14 | 2014-09-18 | Kohler Co. | Wall-hung toilet |
WO2016153772A1 (en) * | 2015-03-05 | 2016-09-29 | Fluidmaster, Inc. | Toilet hydraulic system |
US10352030B2 (en) | 2015-03-05 | 2019-07-16 | Fluidmaster, Inc. | Toilet hydraulic system |
US10961694B2 (en) * | 2018-07-12 | 2021-03-30 | Kohler Co. | Toilet with efficient water flow path |
US11739519B2 (en) | 2018-07-12 | 2023-08-29 | Kohler Co. | Toilet with efficient water flow path |
US11047123B2 (en) | 2018-11-16 | 2021-06-29 | Kohler Co. | Gravity-fed toilet with quiet siphonic flush |
US11560703B2 (en) | 2018-11-16 | 2023-01-24 | Kohler Co. | Gravity-fed toilet with quiet siphonic flush |
US11851864B2 (en) | 2018-11-16 | 2023-12-26 | Kohler Co. | Gravity-fed toilet with quiet siphonic flush |
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