Kohler's design is brilliant. I use public restrooms all the time, and false flushes are quite annoying. It's nice to see an American company bringing innovative products to market. I hope it is made in the USA like most of Kohler's products.
Blog Post
Kohler Hands-Free WAVE Flushometer
False-flush is a fairly common occurrence with sensor-activated toilet and urinal flushometers. I've had toilets flush three times before I've even used them!
Kohler's hands-free WAVE technology, introduced in 2009, may help to solve this problem. You flush the toilet or urinal manually--without touching anything. By passing your hand over the top of the sensor (see photo), you break an infrared beam and activate the flush.
WAVE flushometers are available for line-pressure (as opposed to gravity-flush) toilets and urinals. The K-10673 is a water-saving 1.28 gallon per flush (gpf) toilet flushometer. The K-10675 is an 0.5 gpf urinal flushometer. A 0.5 gpf retrofit model is also available for older urinals. (WAVE flushometers in standard flush volumes are also available, both for new and retrofit toilets and urinals.)
For our GreenSpec Directory, the water efficiency criteria for urinals is 0.25 gpf, so the 0.5 gpf WAVE flushometers for urinals aren't listed in the directory, though it's still a good product for applications where hands-free operation is a requirement. We hope that the WAVE technology will eventually be offered for Kohler's eighth-gallon (0.125 gpf) Barden urinal. GreenSpec does list the WAVE flushometer for 1.28 gpf toilets.
One downside is that WAVE flushometers use 9-volt lithium batteries, which have to be replaced. All models have pushbutton overrides in case of battery failure.
A challenge with this product will be teaching users how it works, especially in locations with a lot of new users (in a restaurant or airport, for example). A simple graphic on the chrome flushometer cap tries to show how it works, but some users won't get it. This may make it more appropriate for office buildings, where most of the users will be building occupants.
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See membership options »WAVE flushometers are priced somewhat below standard Kohler sensor flushometers. New-fixture models carry a manufacturer's suggested list price of $482, and retrofit models list for $415, though prices through distribution channels are typically discounted. All models are available in polished chrome only.
For more information:
Kohler Company
Kohler, Wisconsin
800-456-4537
http://www.kohler.comI invite you to share comments on this blog.
Alex Wilson is the executive editor of Environmental Building News and founder of BuildingGreen, LLC. To keep up with his latest articles and musings, you can sign up for his Twitter feeds.
Photo of Kohler WAVE flushometer. Source: Kohler.
See more on this product in the GreenSpec Guide
Published April 16, 2010 Permalink Citation
(2010, April 16). Kohler Hands-Free WAVE Flushometer. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/blog/kohler-hands-free-wave-flushometer
Comments
Great idea. I remember seeing
Great idea. I remember seeing this in japan but with the sensor on the wall next to the toilet. This model should come with a plaque that can be displayed in the stall in a place that they are sure to notice that instructs the user how to flush the toilet. Otherwise I agree noone will know how to flush it.
The one other thing I don't like about this design vs having a wireless sensor is that the person is leaning over the toilet when flushing, and it's not fun getting sprayed in the face.
Conceptually, I think this is
Conceptually, I think this is interesting and I applaud Kohler for continuing to focus on this issue. However, all the different automatic methods of flushing toilets/urinals, getting water from taps, and even drying one's hands in public washrooms is confusing to the public. There are good technologies out there and new ones are being developed, but human behavior is a critical element. I can see many people thinking that it will flush automatically and not waving their hand. Too bad this design didn't precede the ones that are now common.
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