Added: 3 years ago
From: dieselducy
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  • This brand of the reverse trapway toilet is American Standard

  • Judging by the flush and the bowl shape, i think it's an american standard cadet. it's flagship toilet from 1934 to 1998 and again from 2002 present with the Cadet III

  • Eljer toilet?

  • American Standard?

  • This is either Eljer forward trap or briggs.

  • OMG you are HOT!!!!! <3

  • But this could be a Gerber.

  • I just filmed one of these and it is a Kohler or an Eljer based on the stamp inside the tank. I'll post a response soon.

  • It looks like it may be an Eljer Ellis or Andes

  • @TurboCathedral A very OLD Eljer ellis.

  • PROBLY AN AMERICAN STANDARD SIACTO-MONDEUS MADE FRM 1933-1971

  • that is defintley a standard

  • dieselducy, um......... Are You Gay? (Not Trying To Be Mean)

  • OMG you r hot!!!!

  • Look at the back of the bowl. You might find it.

  • Hmm... I am not thinking that this is a Standard anymore. The tank is like a Case, the bowl is like a Kilgore or Universal Rundle. Kohler is impossible because, they use the Modernus style base. Crane made different designs. Standard made different designs, same with Eljer and Mansfield. So this a Case/UR/Kilgore. :P

  • @an65001 this toilet cant be a universial rundle because they started making toilets in 1952 when there merged with alamo pottery

  • nice flush

  • I've seen PLENTY of reverse trapways. I ALSO think that I saw a newer model once, possibly in Canada or somewhere else.

  • homò?

  • XD the faces are cracking me up!

  • its a standard

  • is it from australia?

  • @dieselducy I think this is a 1959 (Briggs) Case commode toilet.

  • @SamuelGrahn2001 Im also opting for Briggs/Case. But it is different to bakedpotato1678's take.

  • Its a commode :D

  • who the fuck makes a vid of their toilet?

  • Its the kind you shit in.

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  • Bahahahah. Loving the feminine products on te shelves(:

  • on my list dude

  • err... it's a toilet.

  • this guy is gay.......

  • i think this guy is gay.......

  • @1cheataman I think your gay

  • @sproutkitty u "think", but u dont no shat. truth is ur fukin retard so back to ur lil hole and keep sukin ur dick.

  • 1:07 LOL this dude is seriously creepy.

  • 0:33 LOL whatta fag.

  • I either think that it's an old American Standard, or a Crane toilet. Is that the original one from the late 1940's?

  • If the information in the other comment regarding Kohler is correct, then I'll assume it's Kohler. Otherwise it looks like Toto or Crane.

  • @ElevatorMan2012 Kohler and TOTO never made reverse trapway toilets. It is a Crane.

  • @an65001 Kohler did make reverse trap toilets. I know of 3 different models. The 1st was the SIBLEY, the 2nd was the TRENT, & the 3rd one was the TRYLON, which was a close-coupled. All early Kohler toilets up through the late 1950s had the model name stamped at the back of the bowl where normally the manufacturer's nane would be.

  • CRANE!

  • OK, NOW I have the brand. THIS is a CASE toilet.

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  • i think its an american standard ejecto toilet

  • ...People actually care about what brand a toilet is? O.o

  • this is rare! because NO tolet have the thing the stuff going down the other way and the tank is shaped wheird

  • I have this one to.

    This is an American Standard Ejecto.

  • maybe case or crane.And 1920-1930's toilet.nice flush!!

  • Washdown toilets went away in the 1960s due to stricter plumbing codes. Reason? Due to bowl design where feces would hit the china instead of the water, becoming unsanitary. Aside from specialty companies that make antique style washdown toilets, no one has made one since the sixties. Most common was American Standard's Compton and Modernus. I was potty trained on a couple of Comptons in the 1950s. =)

  • the kind you pee in

  • We have a lote of those toilets here in The Netherlands.

  • You have a Standard. Standards are the only toilets that are quad-bolted. (meaning they have 4 bolts)

    Typed with Windows 2000.

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  • @an65001 NO ITS NOT; it's a flushmaster.

    

  • @talkerlover THAT'S THE FLUSH VALVE! :P

  • @an65001 American Standard?

  • @maggio211 Nope. Different Design.

  • @an65001 Who really cares what OS it was typed with?

  • @Windows446 Obviously YOU would.

  • @an65001 We have a Crane Neu Sanix. They also have 4 bolts.

  • It looks like a 1947 Gerber. They usually don't have any markings on them, or it could be a case toilet, meaning it was specially designed.

  • its the mistery crapper!

  • that would be an old westinghouse comode if i'm not mistaken being that your house was bult in 1947 or it could be a crane comode

  • This is a case toilet.

  • maybe a standard modernus

  • @ObamaElevator

    He can keep his account if he wants this comment is VERY rude/mean

  • @ObamaElevator Shut up or im calling Homeland Security on you

  • Judging by the drain and bowl design, it might be a Gerber.

  • it might

  • There is one company that I know of that currently manufactures a reverse-trap toilet: Gerber. It is only available for use with a flushometer. As for your toilet, I have seen and used a few identical to yours. The last one I saw like this was dated 1950 on the inside of the tank. I believe that it is probably a Crane.

  • If it is reverse trapwy, Then this is a Eljer Toilet

  • also you must one guy Its Commodos

  • That was made by Sentry Sanitary Corporation, a company somewhere in West Virginia. They were common in the post WW II tract houses in Burlington, VT. My aunt and uncle had two of them in their 1940's vintage house. They were also in shopping center restrooms that had been built by the same developer. Only reason I know the name is that there was a label on the side of the bowl in the long defunct Ethan Allen Launderette, where I used to go when I lived in Burlington! Great antique!

  • does it madder as long as shit goes down it fine its all good

  • very funny

  • you have alot of random videos lol you have alot of spare time

  • its a very old american standard plebe

  • doedb thereis bshit in ur toilit

    ps.look it up on google

  • I once saw a commerical on TV from Kohler, and those toilets, you can flush anything down them, even dog food, without plungeing. I would have to say it is a rare Kohler. Nice Toilet, anyway.

    PS: The toilet at my house is not like that.

  • good!

    This very resembles TOTO C21!

  • On an unrelated note, we have an Eljer Energizer toilet. It's noisier than a standard toilet because it uses a blast of pressurized water to send the waste down the drain.

  • And also to 'thesmart67'...after looking even CLOSER...they still continued to make REVERSE trappers like this, for American Standard (see my favorites) after 1970, and enhanced / modified the bowl for a more modern look!! And they did this for CANADA, sinc elike you said, they banned here in goody two-shoes USA im sorry to say..doesnt make since to have a GOOD TOILET saying '((AMERICAN)) STANDARD' made for Canada!!?? One of my favs, mentions, he has a 1973, and its a reverser!

  • Another thing that would make a toilet flush better is allowing the water in the tank to go up to where it says "WATER LINE". :) (Ill demonstrate later in MY video. )

  • Another place to look for a brand stamp would be on the back of the bowl, near the floor level in the center. If it's a Kohler, it should have "K of K" stamped there

  • What is a washdown toilet? are they different than a regluar?

  • A Washdown is a European Styling that flushes by flushing all the water around the rim with no specific direction. it is different from American Toilet's in the fact there is no Rim Jets or Syphonic Action when they flush

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  • @dieselducy This typical toilet is called the reverse washdown toilet6.

  • @dieselducy Also, see if you can flush this using a 1.6 gpf flapper valve. These can have an effevctive flush on 1.6gpf.

  • @dieselducy Please don't listen to that guy, he does not know anything. This is a reverse trap syphonic, just like normal ones it's just that the trap is the otherway around, if it was washdown it wouldn't syphon out at the end would it? I hate people who try and mislead people

  • @dieselducy yes. search up caroma toilet on utube. those r washdowns

  • You do not have a rare toilet, I seen a lot of toilets with the trapway like the one in your video. I have an old Eljer in my basement that has a trapway somewhat like that but it is the same set up. IT is also known as a "reverse trap"

  • lol these are Rare today. almost no toilets are made this way

  • Yes they are rare today, and you rarely see toilets this way. I am thinking they were big in the 1920s through the early 1980s I guess. I even remember back in 1983 or so a plumbing store had a toilet almost like the one in this video and I would look at it and I was 9 years old, and it was a Kohler. Most of these toilets now are replaced in most homes and businesses.

  • OK in the tank I see the letters ECE and on the Lid WH what could those mean?

  • hmmm ill research it and get back to you, in a PM

  • I've experienced quite a few washdowns myself. My grandmother had one in her house. The brand name inside the tank was Dixie and was made in 1963. It flushed really well but my 2 year old cousin flushed a toy truck down it and it got stuck. The only to get it out would have been to break the toilet so we had to get a new one.

  • Washdown toilets will ingest a water melon - it seems. My earliest memories of life (I am 53) are "Standard" Compton washdown toilets - once very common in new construction. A/S made them for at least 20 years if not longer. "American-Standard" began to appear on 1962-up Cadet and Glenwall toilets. "Standard" was on older designs that continued into the 1960s. Those first contemporary Madera flush valve toilets had "Standard" - then, American-Standard.

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  • I wish I could of CAUGHT a pic at the time at our local animal clinic that was converted from a old 1950 2 story house, the bathroom must of been the original power-room...and it had a 1950 Standard, and im not certain of the sub-brand, it had a diffrent trapway, it was more narrow and round at the bottom, not like the common Standard "Modernous" where its a BIG triangle shape. I think the bowl was a little smaller, and it was built up on a wooden box, i guess for a better flush.

  • I really wish I had this cam forr ALLL the old wash-downers ive encountered back home in Houston and other places growing up! In my life I must of pissed in over 200 like this one here! :)

  • I remember one housing development where I grew up in Maryland - Calverton - had Kohler washdown toilets - new in 1963-65. Washdown toilets are something that tapered off in the 1960s. Although they were outlawed, there was lots of inventory left, I imagine. Washdown toilets were dirt cheap and builders used a lot of them.

  • I like these washdowns especially "Standard's" better than I do todays, they have a more powerful and stable flush. Also, they are mounted with 4 bolts, instead of 2.

  • Interesting - American-Standard dropped the Compton and Modernus washdown toilets in 1965. I have catalogs from the period. They were gone in the PT65 catalog - 1965. The last time I ever saw washdown toilets in new construction was in 1964. Never saw it after that although you can bet there were huge inventories left after 1965. I think Sears sold new washdown toilets (made by Universal-Rundle) into the late 1960s, come to think of it. You may want to look this up in the Internet.

  • Yea, because my grandpa built his newest house in 1964, and he kept the the old catalog that his plumbing contractor showed him, and it was Kohler, and he had the most modern one circled which he purched 3 of, and on the end was a pic a one like on this video of a reverse trapway, and it was called "The Trylon" And now after looking further at other pics, YES this is a CRANE you have dieselducy. There is a site where they do restoration to ALL KINDS of bowls, whover PMs me, ill link you it.

  • This is an old washdown toilet with the trapway toward the front. They were cheap to make and very common until they were outlawed in 1965. Outlawed because fecal material tended to accumulate at the front of the bowl where water isn't. Yellow Taxi - I think you are right about Crane - not so sure about the tank.

  • Are you sure they were outlawed by '65? I know a place that has a '70s Eljer with a reverse trap. It could be that the tank is a replacement though.

  • Ive seen them dated all the way up to 1969, a Eljer and American Standard.

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  • @CRANEPlumbing shut up or i'm calling homelane security on you

  • @sproutkitty shut the fuck up asshat that was over a year ago...im one of this guys friends so screw off

  • @CRANEPlumbing Doush

  • @sproutkitty learn to spell you little douchebag

  • @CRANEPlumbing you wanna peice of me?

  • This trapway design was very common from the early days of toilets up until the 60s.

  • WHY did they change the design?

  • Hi,

    My name is jason........The tank needs to have more water in it for a better flush....Maybe you should change the fill valve so more water can be in the tank for a better flush.......That is a fluidmaster fill valve in your toilet tank......

  • Take a non abrasive scrubbing pad and clean the bottom on the trapway, and maybe the blow-hole too. Ive seen a trapway like that, it MIGHT be Gerber, or Eljer,or yes like REWYRED here says, CRANE, because Crane made some weird designs.

  • I've always heard it was for sanitary reasons. The big downward slope at the front of the bowl always caught alot of fecal matter...I guess it varies on who uses the toilet though.

  • Toto still makes them for Japan.

  • Its an old crane for sure. Used to be one in this house and it was built in 1963

  • . a nice old design have you more vids?

  • wow thats odd and to think i wanted to make toilet videos when i made my account hence the crapper1 name lol

  • i think this might be an old crane toilet, it's looks and styling look like that of a crane toilet

  • Isn't that trapway design rare? I have only seen a couple like that in my life.

  • I seen plenty of toilets with the trapway like the one in this video. I have an old Eljer that has a trapway like that in a way. It is called a "Reverse Trap"

  • Nice Toilet! That trapway design is fairly rare. I can't put a brand to it, however I did see a Crane like that. Anyway you could have done the video without the gay faces :) at least you aren't flaunting your long fingernails in this video.

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  • Maybe they remade it..:P.

  • I think it's Kohler, I remember seeing this in their catalog.

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