@Background Pony #F7CD
The yellow stuff that builds up is from minerals and other stuff in the tap water which is far more commonly pounding against it than an occasional bit of urine. When you do it in public it’s because it dries out and leaves the residue there which is obviously not sanitary or good smelling, in a shower it’s washed away though so not really an issue. You seem to have said the solution anyways if you really are that concerned, just clean your shower as you’ll need to do that anyways for previously mentioned reasons (soap reisude buildup, tap water minerals, etc).
@LemonDrop
Lol. Try not cleaning your bathroom for a month. That yellow stuff that builds up? That actually does come from shampoo and soap suds. Cleaning that stuff is what bleach was primarily made for. That 5% in your pee is why you get fined when you do it at a wall in public. Its not just because it smells like ammonia. It also acts like it.
@Background Pony #F7CD
That’s hardly a concern, your urine is like over 95% water, when diluted by the shower water too it’s going to have no effect. This would be like worrying about soap or something like shampoo having an acidic pH or worrying about the stuff you clean the shower with being highly basic, it’s just not a concern. The reason toilets are made out of ceramic I am pretty sure just comes down it being a reliable cheap material with many nice properties despite that (smooth surface, no oxidation and minimal reaction with some kinds of chemicals). Plenty of toilets are made of plastic or metal even (see in airplanes or whatever) so the weak interaction of something like urine is really not the primary concern there.
@LemonDrop
I’m really bored so I’m gonna reply to this. I’n guessing you don’t clean your own bathroom. Toilets are ceramic and there’s a reason for that. Most shower stalls are either plastic or acrylic fiber glass. Some showers don’t even have stalls. They have tiled floors. Your pee is mostly water but not entirely water. There are chemicals in it that can be corrosive or at the very least will leave stains in certain materials. You don’t pee in the shower because it could damage your showering area.
@Phantom Rider
Well that’s not really a concern, even just doing it into a toilet splashes up tons of tiny water particles into the air, after all you can smell it usually and that’s coming from somewhere. Trying to be overly clean is kinda silly, especially when you’re in the shower and it’s going to clean everything off of you anyways. Normies just can’t get over the “ew gros” factor because they’ve had that drilled into their head.
Yeah the shower drain and the toilet drain connect to the same pipe so it really doesn’t matter. In fact I always think peeing in the shower if you have the chance to is optimal as using a flush of a standard American-style toilet just for urine is a huge waste of water (urinals, ones with half flush or other designs are better), whereas in the shower you’re using the water anyways so it’s essentially free.
Those who conserve water.
What a worthwhile response.
You do you, but I don’t share it
Also, yay science in the comments.
The yellow stuff that builds up is from minerals and other stuff in the tap water which is far more commonly pounding against it than an occasional bit of urine. When you do it in public it’s because it dries out and leaves the residue there which is obviously not sanitary or good smelling, in a shower it’s washed away though so not really an issue. You seem to have said the solution anyways if you really are that concerned, just clean your shower as you’ll need to do that anyways for previously mentioned reasons (soap reisude buildup, tap water minerals, etc).
Lol. Try not cleaning your bathroom for a month. That yellow stuff that builds up? That actually does come from shampoo and soap suds. Cleaning that stuff is what bleach was primarily made for. That 5% in your pee is why you get fined when you do it at a wall in public. Its not just because it smells like ammonia. It also acts like it.
That’s hardly a concern, your urine is like over 95% water, when diluted by the shower water too it’s going to have no effect. This would be like worrying about soap or something like shampoo having an acidic pH or worrying about the stuff you clean the shower with being highly basic, it’s just not a concern. The reason toilets are made out of ceramic I am pretty sure just comes down it being a reliable cheap material with many nice properties despite that (smooth surface, no oxidation and minimal reaction with some kinds of chemicals). Plenty of toilets are made of plastic or metal even (see in airplanes or whatever) so the weak interaction of something like urine is really not the primary concern there.
Edited
I feel like a xenomorph from Aliens now.
ACID PISS!
If I ever go to prison I’ll just piss on the wall and tunnel out with it!
Holy shit, killing my buzz, brah.
I’m really bored so I’m gonna reply to this. I’n guessing you don’t clean your own bathroom. Toilets are ceramic and there’s a reason for that. Most shower stalls are either plastic or acrylic fiber glass. Some showers don’t even have stalls. They have tiled floors. Your pee is mostly water but not entirely water. There are chemicals in it that can be corrosive or at the very least will leave stains in certain materials. You don’t pee in the shower because it could damage your showering area.
Sounds about right.
Well that’s not really a concern, even just doing it into a toilet splashes up tons of tiny water particles into the air, after all you can smell it usually and that’s coming from somewhere. Trying to be overly clean is kinda silly, especially when you’re in the shower and it’s going to clean everything off of you anyways. Normies just can’t get over the “ew gros” factor because they’ve had that drilled into their head.
Drain is drain, what’s the difference?
Wastin’ yer internet
Well the internet is also a series of tubes and I don’t piss in that.
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