We just ordered bidets for our bathrooms

Anonymous
Come over to my house--you can have ours. It collects dust and takes up a lot of room in the WC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Will the first squirt of water nearly always have remnants of the prior user?


I am pretty sure the goal is only the water touches you, not the sprayer.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We just got one in the mail and installed it an hour ago. The water seems really cold. Any tips?


I haven't done it but thinking this may work - flush first to empty the water. Fill a bucket of warm water from the tub and pour it in. Then do your thing and wash with warm water?


There are basically 3 kinds of bidet seats-which kind did you get?

1. the kind that plugs in (need an outlet very near the toilet)--this kind heats the water itself, but maybe if it's been sitting for a while the water cools back down to room temp?

2. The most basic kind, which gets the water from the toilet tank. At this time of year, that water is pretty chilly and yeah, you can't adjust. I believe the description on amazon is "refreshing".

3. The semi-basic kind, which has temperature adjustment and attaches to your sink lines/the toilet water line. Just as the first big of water in the morning (or after a period without use) from the hot tap is not so hot, the first bit from the bidet will be not-so-hot. For this kind, best bet is to run the water in the sink for a bit so it's hot, then run the bidet water for a bit so that it's warmed up.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will the first squirt of water nearly always have remnants of the prior user?


I am pretty sure the goal is only the water touches you, not the sprayer.


Right--it's like a water fountain--the water sprays out, rinses the parts, and then drops into the toilet.
Anonymous
This is the most DCUM post ever. None of that swill Bubbly for us. Perrier all the way.
PS there is a bathroom/bidet safe extension cord if you need it warm all the time.
Anonymous
Is this a joke?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Don’t you need additional plumbing and space?


If you purchase a bidet toilet seat, you need to make sure that there is an outlet to plug it in but the water attachments just use your current water attachments that bring clean water into the toilet


So ice cold water then?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will the first squirt of water nearly always have remnants of the prior user?


I am pretty sure the goal is only the water touches you, not the sprayer.


Back spray?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Don’t you need additional plumbing and space?


If you purchase a bidet toilet seat, you need to make sure that there is an outlet to plug it in but the water attachments just use your current water attachments that bring clean water into the toilet


So ice cold water then?


Ground water temps here are about 55-60F. That's not ice cold. It's refreshing!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Is this a joke?


Why would it be a joke? Much more elegant and effective than rubbing yourself with dry paper. Do you get the rest of your body clean that way?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is the most DCUM post ever. None of that swill Bubbly for us. Perrier all the way.
PS there is a bathroom/bidet safe extension cord if you need it warm all the time.


Please share!
BTW many "less developed" countries have used bidets for years and view the US as rather backward. And the non-electric versions cost under $100. Could be viewed as more green.
Anonymous
Had a Toto Washlet seat for 2 years. Love it. It also has a seat warmer and it warms the water it sprays at you. Also a hot-air dryer to dry the area afterwards.
Anonymous
We bought a Bio Bidet at Christmastime. Just needed to hire an electrician to install an outlet near the toilet. I love it so much! Water warms up quickly. You can adjust the temperature.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Had a Toto Washlet seat for 2 years. Love it. It also has a seat warmer and it warms the water it sprays at you. Also a hot-air dryer to dry the area afterwards.


+1
My neighbor installed a Toto toilet and is thrilled by it. The wand that sprays the water is very precise and accurate. There is coverage for women and men...(use your imagination), no splashing etc...and it warm air dries. Best of all, the material used prevents any thing sticking to it and the wand self-cleans and sanitizes after each use.

Anonymous
I don't understand the hand held bidets? I am assuming you scootch up on the toilet seat and then spray your ass from behind and let the water run into the toilet? But it seems that this would do let's say an incomplete job. Do you then do it from the front? Seems like you'd get water everywhere.
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