Electric Bidet Toilet Seats vs Non Electric Bidets | BidetKing.com

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Electric Bidet Toilet Seats vs Non Electric Bidets | BidetKing.com

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Non Electric Bidet vs Electric Bidet Seat

You’ve decided to make the jump from a non-electric unit to an electric bidet seat, or you probably already had an electric bidet seat in the past but your new bathroom does not have an electrical hook up. Whatever the case may be we will cover the basic differences between an electric bidet unit and a non-electric unit.

Features
One of the biggest differences you’ll discover when comparing a non-electric bidet unit to an electric unit is features. With non-electric units you are looking at a very limited amount of features like nozzle positioning and warm water at most. In these instances, warm water can even be a bit bothersome as you have to connect to a hot water source, which is always beneath your sink and which means you would be drilling into a vanity closet on most occasions.
For those who are not looking to be limited on features and want more bells and whistles to their wash like warm water, a heated seat, adjustable nozzle positioning, pulsation, oscillation, and many more nifty things, then an electric seat is the right move. Additionally, installation for an electric bidet seat can be simpler without the need to drill into any vanity closets, or anything else that may be in the way between the toilet and a sink water line. An electric unit is simply a plug away from use while a non-electric with hot water might need a bit of plumbing.

Water Pressure
Water pressure is one area where non- electrics will excel in comparison to electric units. By comparison a non-electric unit will have double the force of an electric unit set on high. The reason for this is that non- electric units are based off your homes water pressure, which often times is far higher than the pressure an internal pump within an electric unit can produce. This is a main reason why when someone jumps from a non-electric unit to an electric unit that it feels like a big difference. The tradeoff here is that you get comfort in other regions. For some users control of the spray pressure with oscillation and pulsating makes an electric unit far more worth the money than a non-electric.
It is also common that customers who have a non-electric bidets don’t use them at max pressure. Most customers admit that they don’t turn up their non-electric unit’s pressure all the way up as it seems very uncomfortable. Most Non-electric users at the most tend to raise their pressure just below medium, which electric units like Bio Bidet’s units can achieve.

Installation
Installation of both units can vary in difficulty. In some cases where electricity is available within four feet of the toilet an electric unit becomes an easy install, but other times the need of an electrician might be required.
For non-electrics on the other hand, installation is almost a breeze when it comes to cold water units. The only time this does not hold true is when wanting a hot water connection for a non-electric unit. Adding a hot water line can mean drilling to vanities in order to tap into your sink’s water line. Occasionally sinks may also be too far, exceeding the 6 foot hot water line that comes with hot water capable non-electric units.

Cost
When it comes to cost, cost will always be in favor of the non-electric units. They are far less expensive In every way, but this can also mean far less durable. Most non
What is right for me?

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