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They could do something like till rolls, where a narrow faint red streak becomes thicker and darker until suddenly it stops, and shortly afterwards so does the roll. |
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Ah. This is for public toilets where you can't see the roll. The optical detector would be the human eye, yes? |
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I really thought this was going to be much, much worse. About oozing or something. |
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If this is for a public loo, what good would the pre-warning piece be if you go in when the dark sheet has already been used? It's not like you would use a particular cubicle in a particular public loo so often for this warning to be necessary. You just need to know if the loo roll is present/absent. Surely a simple window in the holder would suffice. |
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If it is for at home, hell, just use a bathtowel. It'll wash! <joking>. |
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[PeterSilly] That may lead to unnecessary panic amongst the "checkers". |
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But the fact remains: If there's no TP to back it up, you're still caught with your pants down ... |
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Instead of a dark sheet, you could use a sticky note with a message that the last user could put on the stall door. |
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Selkie i can see a drunken sport of putting toilets out of action using the note. |
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this is already done for till rolls in... well tills. A pink line (sometimes blue) appears along the last couple of feet of the roll, letting the operator know its nearly done. |
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A la 'Running Out Slip' in Rizla and Swan papers. |
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