Is the toilet bowl’s coating the secret to a clean flush

toilet

Note: I am in Australia, which has very different toilet systems to the USA, which is why this similar question was no help to me.

I have two bathrooms, which are both being renovated, and I will be replacing the toilet suites.

One of the toilets has problems with… for want of a more delicate way to put it… skid marks. The other is absolutely fine. I want to avoid this problem with the new toilets.

I spoke to a salesman today who said it was all due to the coating on the bowl and recommended an expensive brand that he said was the best.

I am dubious. I suspect the cause is something to do with the geometric design – the relative location of the water to the back of the seat, or similar, so the waste never hits the sides. The toilet that has no problems is a reasonably cheap brand, but a discontinued model so I can't just get two more of those.

Is it all about the coating? If it is about the physical shape, is there something I can look out for in the showroom?

Best Answer

It is true that the smoothness of the porcelain is a factor; a newer bowl or a higher quality one will have less of a problem.

Many brands of washlet will spray water on the inside of the bowl before you start, which does wonders for this problem.