h a l f b a k e r yProfessional croissant on closed course. Do not attempt.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
For those unfamiliar with the Clivus Multrum (see link), it is a toilet seat with a big 1 foot diameter hole. This connects to a large composting tank where the waste is stored until it is pumped out by a truck (like a septic tank) and used in fertilizer. The problem is, the toilet must be mounted directly
above a tank, so there must be a tank for each toilet. Also, this can be impractical in homes, because the toilets must be mounted on the first floor.
The Composting Toilet Waste Separator which I am suggesting would allow a whole plumbing system to be connected to a composting toilet without flooding it with water from sinks and flushes. It would be a diagonal pipe with holes in the bottom part. The holes lead to a regular sewage pipe. This way, the solid waste goes to the composting toilet while the water and liquid go through the holes and into the regular sewage system.
I realize that a composting toilet needs water to operate. To adress the issue, this system will divert all the waste, including liquids, to the tank when moisture is needed.
I have linked to an illustration.
Clivus Multrum
http://www.clivusmultrum.com [-----, Feb 25 2005]
(??) Illustration
http://img46.exs.cx...ngseparator26ax.jpg [-----, Feb 25 2005, last modified Mar 22 2005]
(?) Alternative
http://www.clivusmu...com/clivus_new.html [-----, Feb 25 2005]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
I don't know about this drawing link. The brown and the blue arrows look interchangeable. The brown clogging the drain holes, the liquids falling to the lowest point. |
|
|
The idea definitely needs some refining, and the device probably would need ocasional cleaning. |
|
|
I just found a system that already achieves this, but is much more complicated. I want to keep this idea up as a simpler alternative. See link. |
|
|
I can't help thinking what a member of one of our groups is doing in India right now for the past four weeks without any toilet paper. She was instructed not to take any with her because they have no place to dispose of it? Apparently she can make some spare change by making and selling poop bricks. |
|
|
//make some spare change by making and selling poop bricks// <Must not imagine Lego. Must not ...> |
|
|
Is this any better than a seepage tank?
It's never supposed to need emptying,
and stuff just breaks down and seeps
away. |
|
|
No, composting toilets need to be emptied. The waste turns into fertilizer. |
|
|
I think the problem with this is that the perforated pipe is going to plug very quickly. |
|
|
[----] I still don't see why this is
better. With a seepage tank, the stuff
gets bacterially broken down and soaks
into the ground (no doubt finding its
way into plants eventually). So, as a
means of disposing of waste, I don't
understand why your form of
composting is any different. However, I
may be missing a point here.... |
|
|
See the link to Clivus Multrum, a maker of these composting toilets. |
|
|
They are environmentally friendly, odorless, and use less water. |
|
|
could you repost the illustration? |
|
|
Human compost it's a perfect agent to transmit diseases. I don't see the point to promote a fertilization method already discarded long time ago. |
|
| |