h a l f b a k e r yBirth of a Notion.
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The cold, dry fibers of toilet paper can be abrasive.
These can be softened by the moistening warmth of
steam. Steam can be pumped into the roll to
permeate the layers or as a steaming manifold that
surrounds the roll affecting the outer layers.
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Annotation:
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eww- I think that would make *wet* toilet paper! |
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Proof of concept is toilet paper after a steamy shower. |
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Surely it would be easier to generate the steam by having the water in the toilet held permanently at near-boiling point? Thus, by the time you get to use the toilet paper, your arse would be pre-steamed. Splashback might be an issue, I suppose, but not an insoluble problem. |
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This idea is a slippery slope, [rcarty]. You'll be using a bidet by the end of the week. |
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Perhaps each sheet of poo roll should be micro-engineered to have within it tiny waterproof sealed tubules. The steam would be pumped through from the centre, and would billow out from the torn edge of the last sheet. So all the sheets would get warmed, but only the final one would get steamy. |
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