One thing scarier than an autoflusher is an autoflusher with a dead battery and no manual bypass flush button. We have a whole building full of them and no guarantee of clean safe repose.
Even if you have a way to cover the sensor, that starts a 10 minute countdown timer on the toilets where I work. It helps to have a chronograph wristwatch; at the 9:30 mark, pull up your britches, stand up, lift the seat up to keep the upside from getting splashed, and move away. It’s a one-time flush, so once it’s over it’s smooth sailing from there.
Adiraiju over 7 years ago
Oh thank goodness I’m not the only one that happens to.
ajmsdca over 7 years ago
just about jumped out of the stall the first time that happened to me in an airport
Sisyphos over 7 years ago
Face it, penguin! Spontaneous premature flushation is a way of life in public restrooms all along the ribbon of highway!
LadyJessica over 7 years ago
Those flushers are terrible for small children who are just learning to trust the toilet.
Seed_drill over 7 years ago
I encountered one that kept sucking down the “neat seat” every time I’d turn around.
Masterskrain over 7 years ago
“Open the pod bay doors, Hal.”
PoodleGroomer over 7 years ago
One thing scarier than an autoflusher is an autoflusher with a dead battery and no manual bypass flush button. We have a whole building full of them and no guarantee of clean safe repose.
DeltaMikeUno over 7 years ago
Even if you have a way to cover the sensor, that starts a 10 minute countdown timer on the toilets where I work. It helps to have a chronograph wristwatch; at the 9:30 mark, pull up your britches, stand up, lift the seat up to keep the upside from getting splashed, and move away. It’s a one-time flush, so once it’s over it’s smooth sailing from there.
Laurie Stoker Premium Member over 7 years ago
For the record, that last panel freaks me out too!