enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Weird sounds and smells in your home you should never ignore

    www.aol.com/weird-sounds-smells-home-never...

    If this doesn't solve the problem, you might have a broken toilet seal, clogged vents or a broken sewer line. Toilet seals are pretty easy to DIY repair, but the other issues are best left to a ...

  3. Raw Sewage in Your Apartment: Repairs Your Landlord Can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-01-22-raw-sewage-landlord...

    "My bathroom is just full of everybody's feces. The tub, filled with feces. There's mildew, mold coming down the wall," Shepherd said. Shepherd (pictured below) lives in the apartment with her ...

  4. Sewer gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sewer_gas

    An old sewer gas chimney in Stonehouse, Plymouth, England, built in the 1880s to disperse sewer gas above residents. Sewer gas is a complex, generally obnoxious smelling mixture of toxic and nontoxic gases produced and collected in sewage systems by the decomposition of organic household or industrial wastes, typical components of sewage.

  5. Chemical toilet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_toilet

    "Luxury" portable toilets also exist. They are typically mounted on large "office-like" trailers or made from converted shipping containers. They contain every amenity that a public toilet would have such as running water, flushing toilet, stalls, urinals, mirrors, lighting, and even air conditioning and hot water in some cases. [13]

  6. Blackwater (waste) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackwater_(waste)

    Blackwater can contain feces, urine, water and toilet paper from flush toilets. Blackwater is distinguished from greywater, which comes from sinks, baths, washing machines, and other household appliances apart from toilets. Greywater results from washing food, clothing, dishes, as well as from showering or bathing. [1]

  7. Where does the poop go? Your tiny home sewage questions ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-03-30-where-does-the-poop...

    These typically run in the $100-$200 range plus the cost of installing a holding tank and an extra few bucks to chemically treat the waste for odor and bacteria.

  8. Great Stink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Stink

    The smell was very bad, and common to the whole of the water; it was the same as that which now comes up from the gully-holes in the streets; the whole river was for the time a real sewer." [6] The smell from the river was so bad that in 1857 the government poured chalk lime, chloride of lime and carbolic acid into the river to ease the stench ...

  9. Between its odor and appearance, people sometimes mistake it for sewage, Sarasota Bay Estuary Program Executive Director David Tomasko said. Lyngbya-type algae are naturally occurring in Florida ...