Video, we need video of Rhino trying to remediate his thrown!
In the meantime, I have "discovered" a method to remediate new and potential clogs that eliminates the be need to plunge. I shall not describe it here!
We get the same thing from time to time being on a well with a lot of iron in the water. It's rust/lime scale breaking loose. It does look like poo, but it's not. Actually what hoosierdoc suggested about letting it run isn't far off from what I do. Just hold the flush handle down while flushing. Do that a few times and it should clear up (until enough accumulates to start doing it again).
You could also get some Iron Out and put in your tank and let it sit for awhile then do the "long flush" like described above. Might take a couple of times but the Iron Out should help clear it up. I suspect something like Lime Away or CLR might help too.
Video, we need video of Rhino trying to remediate his thrown!
This ^^^
We have iron water and get the same thing.
Video, we need video of Rhino trying to remediate his throne!
In order for the supply to become contamination by non-upper deck means, you'd have to have forced something to flow uphill at somepoint. Your previous plunging couldn't have done this.
Thus, since you cannot and didn't force poo upstream, and inanimate objects don't swim upstream, the obvious conclusion is that it is not poo. It might look like it, but it isn't.
Try HoosierDoc's idea of letting it run continuously as long as your water bill tolerance will allow and live with whatever follows.
In order for the supply to become contamination by non-upper deck means, you'd have to have forced something to flow uphill at somepoint. Your previous plunging couldn't have done this.
Thus, since you cannot and didn't force poo upstream, and inanimate objects don't swim upstream, the obvious conclusion is that it is not poo. It might look like it, but it isn't.
Try HoosierDoc's idea of letting it run continuously as long as your water bill tolerance will allow and live with whatever follows.
You're making a big assumption about what comes out of Rhino's tail end.
In order for the supply to become contamination by non-upper deck means, you'd have to have forced something to flow uphill at somepoint. Your previous plunging couldn't have done this.
Why not?
If I forced it back through the inlet/fill hole at the bottom of the bowl and there is a physical path between there and the fill holes under the rim, I don't see how it could be ruled out. I was definitely applying enough pressure to push water upward a few inches.
On my toilets it wouldn't be possible. The large hole in the bottom only goes to the waste pipe. It goes up and over a curve that's molded into the toilet, and which serves the same purpose as a P-trap under a sink, to keep sewer gas from getting out. The hole in the bottom of the toilet tank (with the flush valve) leads to the little holes under the rim. When you flush, the flapper opens up and the water drains out of the tank and through the little holes under the rim.
I guess, if you plunged the toilet while it was full all the way to the top of the bowl, it might be theoretically possible, but still unlikely.