Say goodbye to toilet brush phobia! This rimless toilet makes cleaning as easy as washing dishes.

"Every time you brush your toilet, do you wonder: Is it cleaning, or just promoting bacteria?"

Look at the rim of your toilet:

  • In those crevices where brushes can't reach, E. coli is doubling in size every 20 minutes.
  • The tiny droplets of water splashed during flushing can land on a toothbrush up to 1.5 meters away (as confirmed by a Harvard University study).
  • Even with the most expensive disinfectant, the bacterial count will return to 87% of its pre-cleaning level after 24 hours.

This isn't just a mental exercise—your toilet is becoming the dirtiest "bacteria petri dish" in your house.

The culprit lies within the seemingly innocuous "rim" of a traditional toilet...

Your toilet could be dirtier than a dog bowl! This design flaw is preventing 99% of households from cleaning effectively.

Every time you brush your toilet, that hidden bacteria party begins again...

Do you know why?

  • Is there a yellow stain on your freshly brushed toilet the day after?
  • An odor that won't go away no matter how hard you scrub?
  • A psychological discomfort that even rubber gloves can't alleviate?

Because the flush rim of a traditional toilet is, right where you can't see it:

  • Growing E. coli
  • Accumulating urine scale crystals
  • Becoming a breeding ground for bacteria

This isn't just mysophobia, but a daily nightmare for every housewife and cook.

The hidden flush rim of a traditional toilet is a "bacteria haven":

  • 30% of wastewater splashes back into the rim's gaps (confirmed by the British Society for Microbiology).
  • Ordinary brushes can't reach the curved flush port.
  • Residual urine stains can form stubborn yellow spots in just a week.

Even more frightening:

You spend 15 minutes a week on your knees scrubbing, but lab tests show that the bacteria count on a traditional toilet rim is 80 times higher than on a phone screen (source: NSF International). All that scrubbing you've done to "clean" is just self-consolation.

The harsh truth is: traditional toilets are inherently imperfect!

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