Maybe you have a rare fungus infection in side your body that comes out in your urine, the urine ways more then the water so it goes to the sides and bottoms bellow the water line and will stick to the side growing molds if not propery cleaned
because it might be clogged Water level in your toilet bowl is first determined by the water level in your reserve tank on back of stool. Check there first to see if it is filling properly. Second reason, maybe that you have a obstruction in you main line, however slight it will cause gravity to take control.
The Coriolis Effect only affects large bodies of water, for example, hurricanes are diverted from the equator because of the Coriolis Effect. The Coriolis effect would not affect a toilet enough to overcome the design of the fixture. The rim holes would start the swirling. Please read the Snopes page that explains this in greater detail. The link is attached.
Muriatic Acid I think.(Pls.Correct me if I am wrong)
barometric pressure differances between outside and inside, in a wind storm, lots of variences in pressure, there is a vent, that allows air in fromoutside to allow water to drain without any gulping of airfrom the drains, this vent allows outside pressure to be directly on the other side of the water plug the the s trap in the toilet forms(plug to keep sewer gases out of house) so when the pressure raises and falls just outside of the vent, the water moves up and down.
Reusing greywater- it's touted as being environmentally-friendly, but it's actually wallet-friendly too. It can also be used to flush toilets. Just pour a bucket of greywater into the bowl, and the toilet will flush without the use of any fresh water.
Skidmarks account for 84.7% of all brown marks in a toilet bowl . Followed in a distant second place by Iron in your water.
No, the water in a toilet does not spin one way in the northern hemisphere and spin the opposite direction in the southern hemisphere. The spin of the water in a toilet is determined by the shape of the toilet bowl and the flush system, not by the direction of the Earth's rotation. In a toilet, the water is flushed by a flushing mechanism. This flushing mechanism is usually activated by pushing a lever or pushing a button, and it causes water to be released from the tank into the bowl. The shape of the toilet bowl, as well as the type of flushing mechanism, determines how the water will move once it enters the bowl. When the toilet is flushed, the water quickly fills the bowl and then begins to swirl around. The force of the swirling water will cause it to push against the sides of the bowl and create a whirlpool effect. As the water circles around the bowl, the shape of the bowl determines the direction in which the water will spin. The water will usually spin in a clockwise direction in the northern hemisphere and in a counterclockwise direction in the southern hemisphere. The spin of the water in a toilet is determined by the shape of the toilet bowl and the type of flushing mechanism, not by the direction of the Earth's rotation. The shape of the bowl and the type of flush system will determine the direction in which the water will spin, regardless of which hemisphere the toilet is located in.
2" or 3" integral trap built into toilet bowl.
I have lived in many places around the world, and have never seen water turn grey is a toilet bowl. I suspect this is a bogus question. Avraham HanadariANS 2 -this MAY happen if the toilet is on a well system and there's lots of fine sediment in the water. - Otherwise, yes, a bogus question.
clay used in making the porcelain bowl or the trace minerals that are in the water in the toilet bow.
Not the bowl, the tank
You would need to pour the water into the bowl.
Sounds like the wax gasket is leaking or a crack in the bowl. Is the floor dry.
Under what circumstance? New toilet, when you turn the water on, water goes down the overflow tube to fill the bowl. You don't have to flush it the first time to fill the bowl.
NO.
You hold them or get clean water for them
On some toilets you DO get water from front of bowl, it's all a matter of design.