Flushing trough

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A flushing trough

A flushing trough is a long cistern which serves several toilet pans. It is designed to allow a shorter interval between flushes than individual cisterns.

Flushing troughs were commonly used in places such as schools, colleges, public toilets, factories and public buildings where repeated use of the flushing cistern was required in a short period of time. Such troughs were used by local councils in the UK into the 1980s.

Water byelaws in the United Kingdom restricted the volume of water that could be used to flush WCs and urinals. Water boards typically required valveless siphonic cisterns that were designed to be "water waste preventers": these deliver a fixed volume of water on every flush and do not allow water to run into a WC pan continuously. A typical siphonic cistern is emptied completely when it is flushed, and can only be flushed again once it has refilled: the delay between flushes was found to be inconvenient in busy lavatories such as those in schools, factories or public conveniences. The flushing trough was designed to overcome this delay by allowing a fixed volume of water to be discharged from a larger cistern.

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