Toilet Liners!

only the yanks could think of that . something else you didnt know you needed . :idea: couldnt be arsed meself stan
 
My son travels every year with my ex-inlaws and tells me they also throw toilet paper into a dedicated bin. I'd rather have all the "contaminated material" in one place (and I'm not changing the place where the most quantity goes, thankyouverymuch :D) than in two. Plus having another thing occupying space in the toilet room... I respect what everybody does in his van, but I'll stick with my "all chemical weapons" in the same container.
 
My son travels every year with my ex-inlaws and tells me they also throw toilet paper into a dedicated bin. I'd rather have all the "contaminated material" in one place (and I'm not changing the place where the most quantity goes, thankyouverymuch :D) than in two. Plus having another thing occupying space in the toilet room... I respect what everybody does in his van, but I'll stick with my "all chemical weapons" in the same container.

I have to agree that having heavily soiled paper in a separate container does not appeal to me. It would be hard to seal so that it is air tight yet possible to add more soiled paper - which means opening it one handed! Then the disposal of it is an added problem - so no thanks!

I use normal paper at home for the sceptic tank & in the boat (a sea toilet which mascerates it) and in the van. In no situation is it a problem, it soon breaks down.
 
Hey, why are you all getting so "p..... off". They look like a great idea; only £6.99; I pass a shop selling them on my next trip out and best of all, the instructions say run water while counting to ten. One...two...
It will keep hubby happy for hours trying to find water.
:angel:
 
Hey, why are you all getting so "p..... off". They look like a great idea; only £6.99; I pass a shop selling them on my next trip out and best of all, the instructions say run water while counting to ten. One...two...
It will keep hubby happy for hours trying to find water.
:angel:

Yes, I noticed that, about 5-6 seconds of flush, hmm, that's probably 1/2 ltr or more. Now add a 1/2 to 1 ltr of human waste & you are looking at only getting 1/2 - 2/3 of your normal capacity in the cassette. So you will constantly be looking for loo emptying facilities too.

I currently deliberately aim to minimise the flushing water used, as every litre of flush is one (maybe 2) fewer uses of the loo before it fills & you have to find an emptying point. Fortunately, we carry a spare cassette so it ain't exactly an emergency, but it does remain an issue to deal with.

Not anti as such, just not convinced of the value of them for us. Everyone else can make their own decisions, but I am happy to explain mine & the reasoning behind it.
 
Someone on a previous thread recommended an occasional spray of silicon lubricant on to the wc bowl. That may help to reduce the amount of flush-water needed over a period of time? :nicethread:
 
squirt it

we've never used the flush on our loo. Have a hand held sprayer filled with diluted pink smelly stuff. A squirt before, and a few squirts after, job done.
 
just learn the position required for a hole in one!!
 

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