The latest addition to my toilet collection.

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

I tried to upload it

But YT is being screwy. Maybe It'll make its way up on YT eventually. If not, I'll get on the computer and see what's going on.

I take it you're not interested in the Bolton still at the Restore?
 
I sent you an email about it, but IDK if the email in your profile is correct or not, is that supposed to be @gmail? Or is "@mail" correct?
 
@mail is correct, but it's my dad's e-mail address. I don't have one of my own. I won't know what the e-mail says until tomorrow since my dad's computer is messed up, it won't let him use e-mail. (Windows XP)
 
I got a video of the Bolton on YT. I think the video of the Wellworth flushing BBQ sauce was too long and that's why it wouldn't upload.
 
I rebuilt my Cadet Compact...

With all brand new Coast parts. In my opinion, Coast makes the best quality toilet repair available. And, the parts are proudly made in USA! I tried three times to get a video of the Cadet Compact up, but YT just kept saying it was unable to upload. I guess I'll have to get my real camera.

sonnyndad++12-10-2014-23-28-16.jpg
 
In the words of sophia patrilo

Its an old ladys dream come true a toilet in front of the tv. you never have to miss a program . very cool collection I would have never thought of it. My grandma use to have a two bathroom house one had pink the other blue. cool yellow color.on your new one.
 
I got a 1951 Standard Compact today for $20.00. At first, I thought it was a first generation Cadet (one of my dream toilets) but alas, it's just another Compact. It was super ultra filthy disgusting when I brought it home. It's missing the original tank.

sonnyndad++12-18-2014-23-14-22.jpg
 
Very old toilet

Hi, I just joined this group.

I do not collect toilets, but all my life I have had a fascination with them. I have a memory of one that scared me when I was in first grade, and wonder if any of you toilet guru's might know what it might have been.

My mother took me with her to her hair dresser, in an older city, just outside of Mystic, Connecticut, back in the very early 1960's. The hairdressers was located in an old brick building, maybe three stories tall. Anyhow, while there, I needed to pee, one of the ladies there directed me to the restroom. The toilet was a rather tall white bowl with a tank up on the wall. I opened the black lid and looked down into the bowl and it scared the hell out of me, being just a little kid! The inside of the bowl had black mineral buildup, especially in and around the bowl-drain. It was that bowl drain that scared me. It went STRAIGHT DOWN into blackness, there was no U-bend in the china bowl. I had to have my mom accompany me back into the restroom and stand next to me while I peed. Then I flushed it and watched the water rush down that creepy black drain.

OK, to my thinking today, maybe the U-bend might have been in the sewer pipe just under the bowl-flange? There has to be a U-bend somewhere to prevent sewer-gas from entering the room, I would think. Anyhow, I have looked all over the internet for a similar toilet, but with zero luck. Do any of you toilet guru's have any idea about this?

I have some friends in Pennsylvania and they still have toilets with 5 gallon tanks, as do many businesses. I love these old toilets. I have replaced toilets in the past, in my place and my parent's. The one thing that still creeps me out to this day, is the open 4" sewer in the floor when you pull the bowl off. You can hear noises coming from it, from rushing water from other drains, to creepy gurgling, from the street...Are any of you others creeped out by drains, or looking down old wells, or stuff like that?
 
1979 Wellworth Water Guard

I just got this 1979 Kohler Wellworth Water Guard this past Saturday for $10. I rebuilt it, and it flushes great. Even for being an early water saver, this still flushes very good.

sonnyndad++2-9-2015-20-11-26.jpg
 
very old toilet

kj,

The toilet you saw was probably something like this: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-191...D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557

It was just a hopper that was attached to the plumbing. The trap was built into the soil pipe a distance below the toilet. They were made by Joseph Vogal. They were intended for unheated buildings. The trap was in the pipe and would be buried below the frost line. The tank stayed empty until someone sat on the seat and it would start to fill. When you got off the seat, a valve would flush the tank into the bowl and at the same time the water supply was cut off and all the water piping above the frost line would drain into the ground until the next use. That was a very rare find! I've seen a few of them on Ebay in better shape than the one I linked above.
Google search: Vogal toilet and you'll find more of them.
http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/16528-100-y-o-j-a-vogel-frost-free-toilet
 
As an eBay Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
K of K!

I'm glad to see you here! I'm subscribed to you on YT, and I very much enjoy your videos. I'm TheUniversalDave1 on YT.
 
I have a little potty talk

This last weekend I had to replace the toilet in the upstairs bathroom because my Mom was having a hard time getting up,  She's 81, so I replaced it with a new American Standard Series 4 chair height  Boy is this thing a flusher.  


 


Anyway, I put the old one, A 1974 American Standard 5 gal per flush outside by the garage, thinking if someone in the area with a vintage house could use it, or since it was in good condition I may take it to the re-store.


 


Last night when I came home, I saw that someone decided to have a little fun during the day, and the toilet was smashed to bits.  It was hauled away in the trash pick-up this morning. 


 


 
 
That's terrible

If I had seen the toilet, I would have snapped it up for my collection. Not destroy it for no reason.

I'm going to ask for a black Kohler Wellworth brand new for Christmas. I love black toilets, but they're just so darn expensive.

sonnyndad++2-25-2015-22-42-13.jpg
 
Well to say I don't collect toilets (and don't want to, not hating though!) this has been an interesting read :)
 
Kinda neat-I am not a "potty" collector either.But sort of neat nonetheless.Do like the 250W Sylvania Mercury bulb warm up end shot.Have a bulb just like that.Love watching it warmup when started!Don't have enough room for toilets.
 
Would this make me a toilet collector since I am keeping the 7 or 5 gal water hogs in my home?I don't like the lo flo toilets-folks that have them keep a plunger by them.Beleive mine are American Standard white.
 
I got a

1959 Kohler Wellworth at the Restore yesterday for only $20. It was one of the nastiest toilets I've ever bought, and it took me all afternoon to clean it up. It still needs some work, the priming jets are badly clogged with mineral buildup, but some muriatic acid should fix that. Until then, it's s good display piece. The colour is Peachblow.



universaldave1++7-1-2015-11-47-12.jpg
 
the yellow,pink and that Black Kohler one are actually beautiful!Oh yes-few years back since the start of "Will It Blend" there was a series of YouTube videos of "Will It Flush"Have you seen these-the person flushes various objects and foods down his toilets.Hate to see his sewer bills!At my sisters house she has a dark colored toilet sort of like the black one shown.Trying to remember if it was back or a very dark green.Watching it work was kinda cool.The fellow doing the flush videos should install a "Muffon Monster" sewage waste shredder after his toilets.Look up their website-they grind up all kinds of stuff that is flushed dwon sewage lines!Think of the Muffon monster as asort of large disposer.
 
"I don't like the lo flo toilets-folks that have them keep a plunger by them."

I agree completely. I have a total obomination made by Universal Rundle in my apartment bathroom. I guess the engineers that designed the blasted thing thought they were being clever, but the odd shapes and creases they built into the bowl make it plunger proof since no plunger I've ever seen can form a seal against it. When I do end up with a clog, the only thing the pluger does is launch filthy water back at me with force. So instead I keep a container in the bathroom that I fill in the tub and pour down the toilet. That usually works pretty well, but not always. So far the record is 157 gallons for a single clog that would have been cleared easily if a plunger could have been used.
 
D-jones,

Believe it or not, Universal Rundle used to be a high class name back in the 50's. I have a 1959 Universal Rundle in my collection. See my videos on YT. It can flush 24 golf balls. Of course the brand new toilets are going to flush incredibly well compared to the early lo-flos. Just look at the new Kohlers. The Aquapiston is a very good flush engine.
 
To verify what was said in the above post about the new Kohler toilets working well, I installed a 1.28 GPF Kohler "Cimarron" with the "AquaPiston" flush valve in my main bathroom a few months ago. I haven't had a single problem with it. No clogs, no issues with bowl wash, no "remnants".

It's made of VERY high quality porcelain. Not flimsy at all like some of the other newer models and brands on the shelf.
 
Kohler's are awesome. I always recommend them on the plumbing forum. I also like to collect them. The Cimarron with Aquapiston was a very wise choice - it is an excellent toilet. I just found a 1989 Kohler Wellworth on CL a few days ago for $20. I gave it the spa treatment, and it is literally like new. Not a scratch on it.

Left to right - 2003 Kohler Wellworth, 1989 Kohler Wellworth, 1959 Kohler Wellworth.

universaldave1++7-10-2015-11-43-50.jpg
 
Lo-flow

I heard on a home improvement TV show that the toilet makers weren't ready when water usage restrictions went into effect, but now the toilets work well. The toilet in my house 12 years ago when I moved in is bad. When I take a bath, I don't drain he tub, because I'll be dipping a bucket into it for flush assistance. AND the plunger has to stay right there too.

Since it seems to get worse over time, I wonder if over time I've gotten looser sphincter muscles and therefore larger poos.

My sister had a toilet in her yard one summer - her project was chipping the calcification built up on the drainage parts. We have very hard water here. Anyway, she thought the toilet was too 'good' to get rid of. I think she finally got a new one anyway.

This thread's inspired me to go to the restore.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top