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“We found that when a liquid jet or droplet train impacts a rigid surface below a certain critical impinging angle, almost no ...
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New urinal designs could prevent up to 265,000 gallons of urine from spilling onto the floor each dayThousands of gallons of ill-aimed pee could be spared from lavatory floors thanks to a new urinal design, scientists say. Around 1 million liters (264,172 gallons) of urine are spilled onto the floor ...
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Boing Boing on MSNNew urinal designs aim to please, with less splashingNew urinal designs could prevent 265,000 gallons of urine splashing onto the floor (and your legs, presumably) a day, if you ...
Urine doesn't belong on the floor, and it definitely doesn't belong on our clothes. An experimental new urinal design could ...
It makes public bathrooms unpleasant to use ... per year to clean the subway’s bathrooms. The new urinal designs would save $10,000 per bathroom every year, and limit environmental costs ...
A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback on the user and the floor will improve sanitation, bathroom cleanliness, and user ...
The concept of public urinals, or 'Pissoirs', originated in Paris in the 1830s, with the city government installing them on major boulevards. The design spread to other parts of Europe and the ...
A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback on the user and the floor will improve sanitation, bathroom cleanliness, and user experience. Urinal designs have not materially changed in over a century.
Researchers at the University of Waterloo have new designs for urinals they say reduce the amount of splatter or “splashback” to just 1.4 per cent of the standard public model. Dubbed the Cornucopia ...
Urinals have not changed much since they started becoming popular in 19th-century Europe, as part of growing public health reforms in fast-growing cities.There are now around 56 million public ...
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