I hate the fact that the slot on these jet-dryers is often so narrow. I often end up touching the machine like you see happening at 4:28 and it just feels so gross.
I stopped using those for that same exact reason. I have thick big heavy man hands and I want them clean not risk it. Even if you do get your hands in the jet air pushes you to touch the walls of it smh
and theres usually only one even if they have room for second. Because they're mounted appropriate ADA Heights as a tall person it's a little uncomfortable having to slouch to use it.
The biggest threat in bathroom hygiene is still the door handle. If I put my clean hands on the same door handle that the last I-don't-need-to-wash-my-hands-every-time guy used, then my hands aren't clean any more. Paper towels score big over the other methods because they let you open the door.
Those "air blades" are the worst. They make them so small that it's impossible to not accidentally touch the sides of the machine with your freshly washed hands.
@@RexDC sure, but it doesn't actually help if your hands are so wide they don't really got the holes. My hands technically just fit but only with millimetres of clearance and my hands aren't even that thick (only wide and long, I'm a quite tall and lanky guy). Lots of men have much thicker hands than me
@@ZRodTW yes, Republican states are tapping on that pesky constitution and protecting the private health information of its citizens much like every communicable disease and disability that came before current year.
Everytime I use the Dyson Airblades, the force of the air always pushes my hand against the side device. This is a big flaw if you want to prevent cross contamination.
The newer airblades are one sided (see 2:41 in this video) and don't have that problem. Unfortunately they're compact and often mounted so close to the wall that you end up touching the wall instead. There are other jet dryers around here that are even worse though, in fact so bad that there isn't any way to use them without constantly rubbing on the wall, I hate those ones, but a few major restaurant chains seem to love them (probably cheap) My preferred method is the Xlerator (as seen at 1:42) they work well, and have enough space that you don't touch anything.
Yeah and those things are marketed as clean because they have UV lights that "kill bacteria" in reality in order to kill a meaningful amount of bacteria you need high power UV lights and time to let it work. The few seconds of very low power UV light does pretty much nothing.
This simultaneously confirmed my "irrational" fears but also that my "obsessive" methods of managing them were actually the right thing to do. So thanks for that.
Paper towels 100% you can use it as a glove to open the restroom door. Protecting yourself from people that dry their hands on their shirt or don't wash not at all.
Though as said in the video, paper towels may collect the germs off your hands so if you use it to open the door, then you may jus make the handle more dirty for whoever has to use it without a paper towel.
@@chrissolace yeah so I should risk contact with germs and bacteria out of consideration for people who decide to use the door handle without any type of protection? Yeah not gonna happen.
@@anonwithamnesia well yeah. good ventilation in general seems to be pretty important. increased co2 levels are widely associated with huge decreases in cognitive function.
Exactly, I really don't understand the mentality of going to work sick and eventually making your colleagues sick. Pure selfishness on the individuals and managers.
well if theres a deadline or contractor breathing down your neck are you going to risk getting fired because you felt "sick" ? Even if you can take it to court others might not hire you, and the court system is so old and slow and the biggest check dude usually wins. Btw im a dude that gets easily sick
If you live in the United States, you have to go to work because most companies don't offer sick leave and you have to rely on company health insurance that has to be paid into.
Note: not every germ is bad, there are beneficial germs out there, but anti-bacterial cleaners do not discriminate and kill both good and bad. Some studies believe that kids living in super clean germ free environments actually end up having more issues with allergies to foods and other things as they grow up.
Dude, that is so 2019. Much like mental health, social isolation, and addiction, we have a pandemic on our hands. We can't afford not to go bat shit crazy with the carcinogenic cleaning products and over sanitation of good bacteria.
precisely, shitting at work is so not kosher. Whatcha gotta do is have about 4 or 5 cups of coffee before you head to work, shit your brains out at home and boom, no weird other-people germs
What about cloth towel roll machines? I miss those things; you hardly ever see them anymore. They were cleaner, felt good on your hands, and didn't waste paper.
I've seen them rarely in the UK. When treated well they're a good choice. But the machines tend to break down more, and they are not likely to be more green than air dryers because the towel has to be cleaned, maybe offsite.
Well yes, the towels need to be cleaned. But so do my hand and bath towels at home. But overall, it is less wasteful to clean and reuse towels than to use disposable towels. Even when considering the water used to clean the reusable towels, you also have to consider that wood pulp production also uses a lot of water.
@@Danr189 Presumably because you'll have been walking around in your clothes all day, bumping into other people, leaning against surfaces, etc., so they'll likely have a lot on germs on them.
I saw a video before saying that these dryers could potentially damage children's hearing since they're shorter, closer to the air flow of these dryers.
My preferred method is the Xlerator (as seen at 1:42) they work well, and have enough space that you don't touch anything. I also like paper towels dispensed by motion sensors or in individual sheets. My least preferred method is any of the many horribly designed methods that make you touch the same surface everyone else does. These include: - jet dryers that are double sided (hard not to touch one side or the other) - all "low profile" air dryers where the air comes out mere millimeters away from the wall, so you end up rubbing the wall as you dry - paper towel dispensers where you pull on the roll and it automatically cuts off a sheet as you go (good theory, but I've never seen one that works right so you don't have to turn the "backup" dial on the side of the machine, just as everyone else has done before you) - paper towel rolls left standing on the counter, they're usually half soaked in who knows what condition water, and you can't tear off a sheet without holding the roll, usually by the centre, just as the person before you did. Bonus side pet peeve, public bathrooms with exit doors you can't just push open with your knee or elbow but have to actively pull on, or turn a knob/lever. Extra bonus ick factor if the bathroom doesn't contain paper towels to use as a buffer between you and the handle.
And often they're too cheap to put in an automatic faucet when they switch the air dryers. I worked at one store that did this and I would constantly walk in the restroom and find a sink running because there are no paper towels shut it off with.
What about cloth towels? I don't know if they're still there, but when I was in uni, a lot of the bathrooms had a towel dispenser that was like a film-reel where pulling the lever would dispense some "clean" towel from the top roll and pull the used part up into the dirty roll (I think both rolls were right beside each other ¬_¬). I never liked them, especially since the "clean" roll sometimes had stains even if they were washed. 🤢
you know, I'm going to start carrying cotton washclothes (in small plastic bags) about with me to dry my hands. I don't use paper towels anymore, and travel cloths just make sense.
@@sparklej1142 Or just keep a foldable handkerchief in your pocket? Thats what people in my country often do. Usually, we don't have air driers or paper towels in toilets here. Only big fancy places have those.
In the Netherlands you see these everywhere, they work on a mechanical spring system. Once you pull out a clean part you have around 30 sec to dry your hands before it rolls back up. Ingenieus design if you ask me, way better than any mentioned method in the vid! Never had any stains on a clean part of towel, they seem to clean them very well.
I hate it when people don't shake off the excess water on their hands first before grabbing a million paper towels. All you need is a single sheet if you just shake off the excess water!
NZ still has those rolls of towels in some older buildings. The towel you pull down to get a clean bit, then dry your hands on that, the older wet part rotates back into the cabinet as you pull out the new bit.
Air dryers are by far the most popular form in Japan but when pandemic restrictions stared in April 2020, all air dryers were turned off and are still inaccessible as of August 2021. A few locations have added towels but I guess most rely on the pant dry technique or bringing your own tissues. I never put much thought into it but have always gone into a stall and used some TP to dry my hands.
@@kingchickenwing4887 The germs might be mostly off your hands right after you've washed them, but if you touch something else with wet hands, way more germs from that surface will transfer to your hands than if they were dry when you touched it.
5:02 These dryers are the best but everyone uses them absolutely wrong. You have to but both your hand completely in and then put them very SLOWLY out. After this your hands are dry quickly.
What I like to do- squeeze my hands over the sink so that the excess water falls off my hands and the rest evaporates relatively quickly, and if I have a handkerchief on me, I use that. I've always thought hand dryers as weird.
@@Ass_of_Amalek Surgeons attacked the doctor that discovered that hand washing was good because it revealed them to be mass murders as they never washed their hands between patients. Just because they do it now, doesnt mean they do it perfect now.
I went to the bathroom at the Port Alberni McDonald's a few years back, and their dryers were so loud that, as someone who went to high school across from a regional airport can attest, it was as loud as a jet engine. Couldn't hear for a good half an hour afterwards. I heard later that this was a problem with the design of the bathrooms themselves and that the older McDonalds locations (post-renovations) were incredibly loud because there was zero sound mitigation in the architecture. So, if you're like me, avoid that sensory overload!
That's why I always wipe down the seat with paper before sitting down...no sense in getting myself any less clean than I absolutely have to...as for paper towels...I always discard the exposed part, then use the freshly exposed one for actually drying...
Probably because it still takes minutes for your hands to fully dry, by which time your hands have probably grabbed the bathroom door handle and made it wet and further contaminated your hands (uggh) then gotten damp minging water on all sorts of surfaces.
I generally use paper towels, but if no one is waiting behind me I also use the hand air drier also, - the air flow more thoroughly dries all areas and crevices of my hands and fingers. My reasoning is that if your hands are even slightly wet, when you leave and start pushing your shopping cart you're just gathering new germs and dirt, etc
If we had cheap superconductors and used design to get around the obvious hurdles of safely creating such a strong magnetic field, we could have the water (which is diamagnetic) pushed off our hands completely extremely rapidly and with no contact.
In my area of Canada, we often used to construct private homes to have a separation or door between the toilet and the sink, which allowed one person to use it and one person to brush teeth or apply makeup. This also means that our toilets were close to a window, and the sinks had little cross-contamination risk. Newer, and smaller homes, either never had this or take this out of the equation, and I've ALWAYS been grossed out by it. I've only ever lived in one home that never had a separation, and that was because it was built in the 30s and the toilet decided it was going to be up a set of stairs from the rest of the bathroom, on a weird pedestal. Also, am I the only one who gets icked out if you keep fresh towels right next to a toilet, even if you flush with the lid closed?!
Paper towels are the best method to dry your hands because you can then use the paper towel to open the door, thus avoiding cross contamination on the door handle.
Paper towels are the best because... They are usually piled together in a machine so the only one that is highly contaminated is the last one hanging down. You discard that first towel and the rest are relatively clean. Another hygiene tip for public bathrooms, you also need to use paper towels to touch the door handles and everything else you're touching in there.
I’d love to see a video on contamination due to manual faucets and soap dispensers. Obviously everyone can’t put these in tomorrow, but I really get annoyed when a public restroom has automatic sinks and manual soap dispensers or vice versa. Both automatic seems like a good way to reduce transmission. Then let’s talk about chlorine in the toilets. That sure does sound like a good way to reduce that flush plume. You can put chlorinated tablets in a home toilet, but I don’t think most public ones (without tanks) can. That plus some good UV light on the dryers would probably help even more.
Im fine with automatic sinks/soap. Whats not fine is when you have such a bad system where i have to hold my hand in this weird position for it to activate, or I cant scrub my hands without it turning off.
I am glad that this episode more or less fell into the middle of the issue which is exactly where I fall. I see the benefits and negatives to each of the options, but it has been the toilet that has long been the thing that has grossed me out, exactly because of the toilet plume. When I am home, I can at least have the lid down, and the air on, etc. but at a public washroom - nasty. I try to only use them if I truly have to.
Team paper towels. In OZ they use a lot of dryers BUT then you have to pull to open the door soooo your hand is recontaminated making washing them pointless. A paper towel means you can use it to open the door. BUT most Aussie toilets are really clean compared to our American ones.
Best option is to keep hands wet. But for drying, best to have either the hot air or "feel the power" open hand dryers, not that dyson one that needs inserting hands since you can touch surfaces on it, but put air filter in the machine and spray the interior of the machine with isopropanol during the regular maintenance phase and clean the cleanable filter to make sure the machine stays clean. Despite the environmental problem, I still like paper towels in public bathrooms, but people should not be going through it quickly and get what they need. At least paper towels can only be contaminated on the exposed part.
If there are paper towels grab a few and wet one and put soap on it. Use that to wipe down the toilet seat and then use a clean one to dry it off. If there are no paper towels then use a bunch of toilet paper instead. Wash you hands and dry them off using whatever they have and use your arm or foot to push the door open to leave. If you have to pull the door open I use another paper towel or some TP....there's usually a trash can near the door so it's easy enough to pull open the door and toss the paper towel away before exiting.
My concern with air driers, whether by hot air or fast air, is not that they will get my hands dirty; they won't. My concern is with them blasting the moisture on my hands all over the room. And that's why I strongly favour paper towels.
I prefer paper towels because the other methods create a lot of noise. I have sensory processing issues and the hand dryers make too much noise for me to use comfortably. There’s also a problem with self-flushing toilets because there is no way to tell when they are going to flush or how loud they are going to flush.
The only reason companies use blowers is to save money. Paper needs to be reordered with it's out, and restocked by an employee. If they remove paper products they lose several salaries and potentially save tens of thousands of dollars a year. There's nothing more to it than that.
Yeah, I refuse to go anywhere near those noisy and disgustingly dirty machines. I don't want to touch those air blades that are usually extremely dirty looking (and with the tiny holes it's not an option not to touch them); and they are painfully loud. If there's no towel (paper or fabric is fine) I just walk out with wet hands and wait for them to dry, and then use hand sanitiser.
If you wash your hands properly where they are ACTUALLY CLEAN a heated hand dryer works best... When entering a bathroom with a heated dryer. #1 Bump the dryer with your elbow to start it or if it is motion activated, trigger it so it warms up a little bit. #2 Go and Doo your business. #3 Bump the dryer (with your elbow) before you wash your hands. #4 PROPERLY WASH YOUR HANDS #5 Hopefully the heated dryer is warm. Dry your hands in hot air. Use the dryer till your hands are toasty and dry. #6 Well this one sucks BIG TIME. How do you open the door? Where a third of people DO NOT WASH THEIR HANDS AT ALL. The video did not mention the amount of bacteria on the door of the bathroom(if there is a door). Using a couple pieces of paper towel on the handle to open the door helps (if paper towels are available). Hopefully the bathroom doesn't have a door and is designed with a proper privacy entrance. But if it does have a door a trashcan should be outside the bathroom to dispose of paper towels used to open the bathroom door. And the mention in the video of proper ventilation for a bathroom is building code. An exhaust fan should be moving a minimum amount of cubic feet per minute of air out of the bathroom to remove odors. All of these things were utilized IN VARIOUS ways in a control study at Wichita State University in the late 1990's. Without any Staff or Students knowing. Except the schools administration, the professor and students in charge of the study. I know this because My older Sister was one of those students in charge of the study. It lasted 2 years.
The door part would be easy to solve today tbh, either motion sensor based when people are in front of it. Or a non-contact button which if it senses a human hand nearby it opens the door. Probably best to still include a physical door handle as backup in case the power goes out though.
I generally avoid public toilet... and always put toilet paper over the seat before using them.... i have seen people squat on the toilet seats before. Have always used paper towel. When i was elementary school, I once slipped in a dirty restroom. I were very sick for an entire week. I got shots,took medicines, and confined bed. I occasionally have nightmares of dirty restrooms.
‘Whatever method is good, except wiping on your t-shirt.’ Oh good. My workplace brought in jet dryers but they since brought back the paper towels. Which was nice because jet dryers _really_ dry out your hands if you use them often. My hands dry out really easily which is also an issue if I start using sanitiser frequently. I have to watch how much sanitiser I use otherwise my hands crack which Nope, not allowed around Covid. Sanitiser would be the exact opposite of helpful in stopping Covid in that case.
Well you just do whatever is available - there's very rarely a choice I think, though the idea that hand dryers spread germs is simply perpetuated by the paper companies to insert sensationalist articles into the media to improve PR. It's just a wild coincidence that when a study says paper towels are better, the paper company is always so thoughtful they pay for the study
Jet dryers pose a public safety hazard for noise levels. In a small tiled room where everything echoes, these things go way over 85dB. Im frankly amazed nobody has sued Dyson in a class action suit for hearing loss.
Nothing is worse than those auto flushing toilets. You'll be half stood up ready to wipe your ass, and this intense suction happens mid wipe and you can feel the splash back hitting you and everything else. Then, as you awkardly fumble the second and third wipe, the stupid sensor trips another half a dozen times sending everyone ass particles at you.
The WHO statement was taken from a perspective talking about killing the coronavirus through hand dryers. Which cannot be used in accordance with spreading of bacteria from a hand dryer. (Just feel like pointing that out. The WHO and CDC is responsible for the safety of the people and recommends drying hands after washing, rather than leaving it to dry on its own. To avoid bacterial/ viral contamination if they accidentally touch other surfaces before it has dried out.)
I don’t need no farting robot blowing bacteria everywhere! My preferred method is to wait until I get home and use my bathroom but I generally use paper towels over dryers.
I hate the fact that the slot on these jet-dryers is often so narrow.
I often end up touching the machine like you see happening at 4:28 and it just feels so gross.
That's the exact reason why I've never used one. I'm not sure what the cleanliness level of those things are, and I'm not willing to take the risk.
I stopped using those for that same exact reason. I have thick big heavy man hands and I want them clean not risk it. Even if you do get your hands in the jet air pushes you to touch the walls of it smh
@@DaftPunkSkittle yeah indeed, the streams of air make it really hard to keep your hands in the middle
The way that fella is using the dryer is even worse. in, out, in, out it's all the way in then slowly out and i bet that UV light is useless
and theres usually only one even if they have room for second. Because they're mounted appropriate ADA Heights as a tall person it's a little uncomfortable having to slouch to use it.
The biggest threat in bathroom hygiene is still the door handle. If I put my clean hands on the same door handle that the last I-don't-need-to-wash-my-hands-every-time guy used, then my hands aren't clean any more. Paper towels score big over the other methods because they let you open the door.
But paper towels can still be covered in germs floating in the air
Those "air blades" are the worst. They make them so small that it's impossible to not accidentally touch the sides of the machine with your freshly washed hands.
Just tense you muscles
@@Eliteboss2004 Your hands get smaller if you tense your muscles?!
@@SteinGauslaaStrindhaug No. They just resist the airflow more and get pushed by the air less.
@@RexDC sure, but it doesn't actually help if your hands are so wide they don't really got the holes. My hands technically just fit but only with millimetres of clearance and my hands aren't even that thick (only wide and long, I'm a quite tall and lanky guy). Lots of men have much thicker hands than me
They also don't really remove water.
1980s sci-fi movies: we’re gonna have flying cars in a few decades!!
2021: still teaching people how to wash their hands.
🤣🤣🤣
THIS IS A GREAT COMMENT! Congratulations you deserve praise.
No flying machines without that ;P
Always new humans being made
@@ZRodTW yes, Republican states are tapping on that pesky constitution and protecting the private health information of its citizens much like every communicable disease and disability that came before current year.
Everytime I use the Dyson Airblades, the force of the air always pushes my hand against the side device. This is a big flaw if you want to prevent cross contamination.
The newer airblades are one sided (see 2:41 in this video) and don't have that problem. Unfortunately they're compact and often mounted so close to the wall that you end up touching the wall instead. There are other jet dryers around here that are even worse though, in fact so bad that there isn't any way to use them without constantly rubbing on the wall, I hate those ones, but a few major restaurant chains seem to love them (probably cheap)
My preferred method is the Xlerator (as seen at 1:42) they work well, and have enough space that you don't touch anything.
that trench of nasty wet water at the bottom... gross
Yeah and those things are marketed as clean because they have UV lights that "kill bacteria" in reality in order to kill a meaningful amount of bacteria you need high power UV lights and time to let it work. The few seconds of very low power UV light does pretty much nothing.
Dyson products have always been fancy design garbage.
Dyson are the worst
Love your dry humor! ;)
"Have you learned nothing, you absolute monster." - perfect delivery!
@@AnonymousFreakYT This episode of cheddar is definitely more aggressive than others
lmao
Nah, I think the humor blows.
xD
Brilliant lol
This simultaneously confirmed my "irrational" fears but also that my "obsessive" methods of managing them were actually the right thing to do. So thanks for that.
Yes
Right
Paper towels 100% you can use it as a glove to open the restroom door. Protecting yourself from people that dry their hands on their shirt or don't wash not at all.
Though as said in the video, paper towels may collect the germs off your hands so if you use it to open the door, then you may jus make the handle more dirty for whoever has to use it without a paper towel.
@@chrissolace not if you wash the germs off your hand first, or get a fresh dry papertowl
@@shanet7511 That’s assuming everyone washes their hands properly though.
@@chrissolace yeah so I should risk contact with germs and bacteria out of consideration for people who decide to use the door handle without any type of protection? Yeah not gonna happen.
You can just use loo roll or clothing
This just proved to me that we need better air purifying in bathrooms.
Same with me. Fresh air seems to be an often overlooked, yet critical, element to bathroom cleanliness.
@@Ascertivus not only bathroom cleanliness. It’s a thing for every room.
@@anonwithamnesia well yeah. good ventilation in general seems to be pretty important. increased co2 levels are widely associated with huge decreases in cognitive function.
@@red2theelectricboogaloo961 yeah, not only ventilation. Humidity is also an important factor. There are a lot of factors involved.
@@red2theelectricboogaloo961 There are more factors like pressure, air cleanliness, temperature and much more.
What a bunch of hot air.
Exactly, I really don't understand the mentality of going to work sick and eventually making your colleagues sick. Pure selfishness on the individuals and managers.
well if theres a deadline or contractor breathing down your neck are you going to risk getting fired because you felt "sick" ? Even if you can take it to court others might not hire you, and the court system is so old and slow and the biggest check dude usually wins. Btw im a dude that gets easily sick
If you live in the United States, you have to go to work because most companies don't offer sick leave and you have to rely on company health insurance that has to be paid into.
Note: not every germ is bad, there are beneficial germs out there, but anti-bacterial cleaners do not discriminate and kill both good and bad. Some studies believe that kids living in super clean germ free environments actually end up having more issues with allergies to foods and other things as they grow up.
For the skin. I wouldn’t say good bacteria. More neutral. The less bad bacteria occupy space to prevent worse ones
That’s why we have vaccines and antibiotics
@@말랑말랑-l2b
Vaccines and antibiotics do nothing for allergies.
I’m immune to bacterial diseases because I let pretty ladies take dumps in my mouth.
Dude, that is so 2019. Much like mental health, social isolation, and addiction, we have a pandemic on our hands. We can't afford not to go bat shit crazy with the carcinogenic cleaning products and over sanitation of good bacteria.
"so what's a germaphobe to do in the face of such pestilential perils?" ... Don't poop.
precisely, shitting at work is so not kosher. Whatcha gotta do is have about 4 or 5 cups of coffee before you head to work, shit your brains out at home and boom, no weird other-people germs
do like the dear leader!
Poop at home.
Welp, just lost a bet about the toilet flushes. Thanks Cheddar for costing me $20. 🤦🏼♂️
What about cloth towel roll machines? I miss those things; you hardly ever see them anymore. They were cleaner, felt good on your hands, and didn't waste paper.
Never even heard of them.
That's old school!
I've seen them rarely in the UK. When treated well they're a good choice. But the machines tend to break down more, and they are not likely to be more green than air dryers because the towel has to be cleaned, maybe offsite.
In very, VERY posh Restaurants or nightclubs you still get them.. but then there is usually someone there handing them to you..
Well yes, the towels need to be cleaned. But so do my hand and bath towels at home. But overall, it is less wasteful to clean and reuse towels than to use disposable towels. Even when considering the water used to clean the reusable towels, you also have to consider that wood pulp production also uses a lot of water.
drying hands on your pants of shirt is better, because your clothes has less time exposure to the toilet air.
That's what I thought! The video says not to but doesn't explain why
@@Danr189 I assume its because when you flush you dont get out quick enough so it gets on your clothes
@@Danr189 Presumably because you'll have been walking around in your clothes all day, bumping into other people, leaning against surfaces, etc., so they'll likely have a lot on germs on them.
What about a clean handkerchief that I keep in my pocket? It doesn't get exposed to toilet plumes or brushing against others.
@@ppsaha1994 that's different entirely.
The issue I have with the jet dryers is the noise. Many of those things get so loud that it’s painful.
I saw a video before saying that these dryers could potentially damage children's hearing since they're shorter, closer to the air flow of these dryers.
@@rachelle2227 saw the same video. Nasty business.
My preferred method is the Xlerator (as seen at 1:42) they work well, and have enough space that you don't touch anything. I also like paper towels dispensed by motion sensors or in individual sheets.
My least preferred method is any of the many horribly designed methods that make you touch the same surface everyone else does. These include:
- jet dryers that are double sided (hard not to touch one side or the other)
- all "low profile" air dryers where the air comes out mere millimeters away from the wall, so you end up rubbing the wall as you dry
- paper towel dispensers where you pull on the roll and it automatically cuts off a sheet as you go (good theory, but I've never seen one that works right so you don't have to turn the "backup" dial on the side of the machine, just as everyone else has done before you)
- paper towel rolls left standing on the counter, they're usually half soaked in who knows what condition water, and you can't tear off a sheet without holding the roll, usually by the centre, just as the person before you did.
Bonus side pet peeve, public bathrooms with exit doors you can't just push open with your knee or elbow but have to actively pull on, or turn a knob/lever. Extra bonus ick factor if the bathroom doesn't contain paper towels to use as a buffer between you and the handle.
So, what you're saying is hold your breath as you flush the toilet and run!? Got it.
Ha pes ta
Companies just install things because they don't want to have to pay for paper towels.
And often they're too cheap to put in an automatic faucet when they switch the air dryers. I worked at one store that did this and I would constantly walk in the restroom and find a sink running because there are no paper towels shut it off with.
You forgot to consider one of the possibly most frequently used hand dryer (that I see everyday) - back of the tshirt or jeans...
You should look up that one Mythbusters episode about this.
What about cloth towels? I don't know if they're still there, but when I was in uni, a lot of the bathrooms had a towel dispenser that was like a film-reel where pulling the lever would dispense some "clean" towel from the top roll and pull the used part up into the dirty roll (I think both rolls were right beside each other ¬_¬). I never liked them, especially since the "clean" roll sometimes had stains even if they were washed. 🤢
I'm 27 and remember them in old sports bars and pub as a kid
never in my life have I ever seen that, what country ?
you know, I'm going to start carrying cotton washclothes (in small plastic bags) about with me to dry my hands. I don't use paper towels anymore, and travel cloths just make sense.
@@sparklej1142 Or just keep a foldable handkerchief in your pocket? Thats what people in my country often do. Usually, we don't have air driers or paper towels in toilets here. Only big fancy places have those.
In the Netherlands you see these everywhere, they work on a mechanical spring system. Once you pull out a clean part you have around 30 sec to dry your hands before it rolls back up. Ingenieus design if you ask me, way better than any mentioned method in the vid! Never had any stains on a clean part of towel, they seem to clean them very well.
I hate it when people don't shake off the excess water on their hands first before grabbing a million paper towels. All you need is a single sheet if you just shake off the excess water!
I don't use any of those options, I cup and clap my hands when I am done with washing them.
The XLERATOR is my hands on favorite method of drying hands down. I want one for my house.
Still boils down to “if you’re sick, stay home”. Go figure.
NZ still has those rolls of towels in some older buildings. The towel you pull down to get a clean bit, then dry your hands on that, the older wet part rotates back into the cabinet as you pull out the new bit.
Air dryers are by far the most popular form in Japan but when pandemic restrictions stared in April 2020, all air dryers were turned off and are still inaccessible as of August 2021. A few locations have added towels but I guess most rely on the pant dry technique or bringing your own tissues. I never put much thought into it but have always gone into a stall and used some TP to dry my hands.
i hate jet dryers. They don't work properly. (and don't have any other options) I prefer my pants to dryers!
but is it really important to dry youre hands? why not just flick em off and go?
I was wondering that too, wouldn't the bacteria be mostly gone already
Because if you touch a surface with wet hands germs will transfer much more easily than if your hands were dry.
@@kingchickenwing4887 The germs might be mostly off your hands right after you've washed them, but if you touch something else with wet hands, way more germs from that surface will transfer to your hands than if they were dry when you touched it.
@@Lucky10279 what if you wave your hands around a lot, gets exercise and chances are the next thing you touch, your hands will be bone dry
@@red2theelectricboogaloo961 It's pretty hard to get your hands thoroughly dry by shaking them.
Wrong you'll usually find one method in a public bathroom that you'll have no choice as to which that one will be... at least in the US.
5:02 These dryers are the best but everyone uses them absolutely wrong. You have to but both your hand completely in and then put them very SLOWLY out. After this your hands are dry quickly.
Cheddar: attack those who disagree with you.
Mad Max Fans: FINALLY a YT channel who lets me channel my aggression
What I like to do- squeeze my hands over the sink so that the excess water falls off my hands and the rest evaporates relatively quickly, and if I have a handkerchief on me, I use that. I've always thought hand dryers as weird.
if we're talking about maximum hygiene, I'd say it's a pretty strong clue that surgeons don't dry their hands.
@@Ass_of_Amalek Surgeons attacked the doctor that discovered that hand washing was good because it revealed them to be mass murders as they never washed their hands between patients. Just because they do it now, doesnt mean they do it perfect now.
I always take the first paper towel and throw it in the bin and use the second one
I went to the bathroom at the Port Alberni McDonald's a few years back, and their dryers were so loud that, as someone who went to high school across from a regional airport can attest, it was as loud as a jet engine. Couldn't hear for a good half an hour afterwards. I heard later that this was a problem with the design of the bathrooms themselves and that the older McDonalds locations (post-renovations) were incredibly loud because there was zero sound mitigation in the architecture. So, if you're like me, avoid that sensory overload!
It's so gross when people don't close the lid. Most public bathrooms in Australia have lids, but so many gross people still don't use them
What kind of nasty is spread when the auto flush happens? 🚻 🤮
I will now wear mask in the public bathrooms
That's why I always wipe down the seat with paper before sitting down...no sense in getting myself any less clean than I absolutely have to...as for paper towels...I always discard the exposed part, then use the freshly exposed one for actually drying...
Shake the hands 12 times, then dry them with paper or dryer
Never enter a McDonald's bathroom without a paper towel. You'll have to touch the doorknob on the way out.
So basically "just do whatever you've already been doing, unless you've been sniffing the toilet flush air."
So... why no hand shaking? I guess i have learnt nothing 🤷♂️
Probably because it still takes minutes for your hands to fully dry, by which time your hands have probably grabbed the bathroom door handle and made it wet and further contaminated your hands (uggh) then gotten damp minging water on all sorts of surfaces.
I generally use paper towels, but if no one is waiting behind me I also use the hand air drier also, - the air flow more thoroughly dries all areas and crevices of my hands and fingers. My reasoning is that if your hands are even slightly wet, when you leave and start pushing your shopping cart you're just gathering new germs and dirt, etc
If we had cheap superconductors and used design to get around the obvious hurdles of safely creating such a strong magnetic field, we could have the water (which is diamagnetic) pushed off our hands completely extremely rapidly and with no contact.
Personally, I say just avoid the whole issue and amputate.
Just don't go in public, unless you absolutely have to. I hold that!
In my area of Canada, we often used to construct private homes to have a separation or door between the toilet and the sink, which allowed one person to use it and one person to brush teeth or apply makeup. This also means that our toilets were close to a window, and the sinks had little cross-contamination risk. Newer, and smaller homes, either never had this or take this out of the equation, and I've ALWAYS been grossed out by it. I've only ever lived in one home that never had a separation, and that was because it was built in the 30s and the toilet decided it was going to be up a set of stairs from the rest of the bathroom, on a weird pedestal. Also, am I the only one who gets icked out if you keep fresh towels right next to a toilet, even if you flush with the lid closed?!
Paper towels are the best method to dry your hands because you can then use the paper towel to open the door, thus avoiding cross contamination on the door handle.
especially if you have a Band-Aid on your hand.
You forgot about the door handle when you leave the restrooms.
The biggest source of contamination regardless of how you dry.
a few put these foot handles on the bottom of their restroom. doors. It's not a great solution but at least it tried to address the problem.
Paper towels are the best because...
They are usually piled together in a machine so the only one that is highly contaminated is the last one hanging down. You discard that first towel and the rest are relatively clean.
Another hygiene tip for public bathrooms, you also need to use paper towels to touch the door handles and everything else you're touching in there.
I’d love to see a video on contamination due to manual faucets and soap dispensers. Obviously everyone can’t put these in tomorrow, but I really get annoyed when a public restroom has automatic sinks and manual soap dispensers or vice versa. Both automatic seems like a good way to reduce transmission.
Then let’s talk about chlorine in the toilets. That sure does sound like a good way to reduce that flush plume. You can put chlorinated tablets in a home toilet, but I don’t think most public ones (without tanks) can. That plus some good UV light on the dryers would probably help even more.
Im fine with automatic sinks/soap. Whats not fine is when you have such a bad system where i have to hold my hand in this weird position for it to activate, or I cant scrub my hands without it turning off.
Who is old enough to remember towel roll machines in public bathrooms?? 😭😭😭
I've seen one once in a public toilet, but I have several times on trains
I am glad that this episode more or less fell into the middle of the issue which is exactly where I fall. I see the benefits and negatives to each of the options, but it has been the toilet that has long been the thing that has grossed me out, exactly because of the toilet plume. When I am home, I can at least have the lid down, and the air on, etc. but at a public washroom - nasty. I try to only use them if I truly have to.
So what is the best drying method? No, this video doesn't answer that. Solution, stay at home. What?!?!
The Dyson machines has to be the most disgusting way you can possibly dry your hands.
MythBusters already did a thing on hand dryers and said they'd spread the germs even more
Team paper towels. In OZ they use a lot of dryers BUT then you have to pull to open the door soooo your hand is recontaminated making washing them pointless. A paper towel means you can use it to open the door. BUT most Aussie toilets are really clean compared to our American ones.
Well.
At least towels actually dry your hands within the hour
Well good hand dryers dry your hands just as fast
This is why the Dyson Air blade dryers aren't just forced-air, they use HEPA filters, whereas other dryers don't
so if we were taught how to wash our hands in the pandemic then that means that before the pandemic... 😳
You would be very very surprised....
6:55 "Have you learned nothing, you absolute monster?"
I sense a bit of GlaDOS in this narrator.
Just move your hands around in the air. It isn't so hard...
It's infuriating that people still don't know to use a toilet lid. Even my germaphobe friend didn't know, boy was that big for them.
Probably working from home is still best!
2:00 I like the sexy face of Dr. Moro when he says "A trash can! ...you call it."
Best option is to keep hands wet. But for drying, best to have either the hot air or "feel the power" open hand dryers, not that dyson one that needs inserting hands since you can touch surfaces on it, but put air filter in the machine and spray the interior of the machine with isopropanol during the regular maintenance phase and clean the cleanable filter to make sure the machine stays clean. Despite the environmental problem, I still like paper towels in public bathrooms, but people should not be going through it quickly and get what they need. At least paper towels can only be contaminated on the exposed part.
If there are paper towels grab a few and wet one and put soap on it. Use that to wipe down the toilet seat and then use a clean one to dry it off. If there are no paper towels then use a bunch of toilet paper instead.
Wash you hands and dry them off using whatever they have and use your arm or foot to push the door open to leave. If you have to pull the door open I use another paper towel or some TP....there's usually a trash can near the door so it's easy enough to pull open the door and toss the paper towel away before exiting.
BUT the DOOR handles.
Now I'm going to dry my handy on your shirt
My concern with air driers, whether by hot air or fast air, is not that they will get my hands dirty; they won't.
My concern is with them blasting the moisture on my hands all over the room.
And that's why I strongly favour paper towels.
I use a clean paper towel to open the restroom door, therefore, the dryer is useless!
Can you use the metric system, like the rest of humanity?
Let’s give it up for hearing damage!!
I prefer paper towels because the other methods create a lot of noise. I have sensory processing issues and the hand dryers make too much noise for me to use comfortably. There’s also a problem with self-flushing toilets because there is no way to tell when they are going to flush or how loud they are going to flush.
The only reason companies use blowers is to save money. Paper needs to be reordered with it's out, and restocked by an employee. If they remove paper products they lose several salaries and potentially save tens of thousands of dollars a year. There's nothing more to it than that.
My shirt is pretty clean.
By the time you’ve traveled from home to a public bathroom and have to use it, your shirt’s been contaminated.
Maybe hand sanitizer is the best option.
Edit: I mean sanitize after wash and drying
Not really. If you use that instead of soap and water you still have particles of poop or whatever on your hands. Ick.
@@LateNightKaiju yeah.. its better to do both.. wash, dry and sanitize.
@@LateNightKaiju some place have hand sanitizer outside their restrooms. And that was long before covid
"Have you learned nothing? You absolute Monster..." XD
If I need to go poop, Im going home I don't care if I'm in the middle of a meeting. I'm just going to go home.
How many of us while watching this video at some point touched our faces?
Yeah, I refuse to go anywhere near those noisy and disgustingly dirty machines. I don't want to touch those air blades that are usually extremely dirty looking (and with the tiny holes it's not an option not to touch them); and they are painfully loud. If there's no towel (paper or fabric is fine) I just walk out with wet hands and wait for them to dry, and then use hand sanitiser.
wash your hands and then apply hand sanitizer when they’re dry 😈
I just swing my hands around a couple of times and then let evaporation do the job.
maybe we need to all carry our own reusable towel!!! #Towel #Reusables
I had that same thought while watching! I personally like that idea.
...handkerchiefs are already a thing man.
sad ! in asia, bosses think u r partying when u called in sick. so they still asked u to come to office when u r still sick or not fully recovered
that's true in America too
Today I learned that I'm a monster. Oh well.
If you wash your hands properly where they are ACTUALLY CLEAN a heated hand dryer works best... When entering a bathroom with a heated dryer.
#1 Bump the dryer with your elbow to start it or if it is motion activated, trigger it so it warms up a little bit.
#2 Go and Doo your business.
#3 Bump the dryer (with your elbow) before you wash your hands.
#4 PROPERLY WASH YOUR HANDS
#5 Hopefully the heated dryer is warm. Dry your hands in hot air. Use the dryer till your hands are toasty and dry.
#6 Well this one sucks BIG TIME. How do you open the door? Where a third of people DO NOT WASH THEIR HANDS AT ALL.
The video did not mention the amount of bacteria on the door of the bathroom(if there is a door).
Using a couple pieces of paper towel on the handle to open the door helps (if paper towels are available).
Hopefully the bathroom doesn't have a door and is designed with a proper privacy entrance.
But if it does have a door a trashcan should be outside the bathroom to dispose of paper towels used to open the bathroom door.
And the mention in the video of proper ventilation for a bathroom is building code.
An exhaust fan should be moving a minimum amount of cubic feet per minute of air out of the bathroom to remove odors.
All of these things were utilized IN VARIOUS ways in a control study at Wichita State University in the late 1990's.
Without any Staff or Students knowing. Except the schools administration, the professor and students in charge of the study.
I know this because My older Sister was one of those students in charge of the study. It lasted 2 years.
The door part would be easy to solve today tbh, either motion sensor based when people are in front of it. Or a non-contact button which if it senses a human hand nearby it opens the door. Probably best to still include a physical door handle as backup in case the power goes out though.
I generally avoid public toilet... and always put toilet paper over the seat before using them.... i have seen people squat on the toilet seats before. Have always used paper towel. When i was elementary school, I once slipped in a dirty restroom. I were very sick for an entire week. I got shots,took medicines, and confined bed. I occasionally have nightmares of dirty restrooms.
‘Whatever method is good, except wiping on your t-shirt.’
Oh good. My workplace brought in jet dryers but they since brought back the paper towels. Which was nice because jet dryers _really_ dry out your hands if you use them often.
My hands dry out really easily which is also an issue if I start using sanitiser frequently. I have to watch how much sanitiser I use otherwise my hands crack which Nope, not allowed around Covid. Sanitiser would be the exact opposite of helpful in stopping Covid in that case.
Paper towels. The environment is the absolute last thing I'm worried about while trying to achieve sanitation.
Every time I wash my hands, it’s alway “Do I use paper towels to make the doctors happy? Or do I use air dryers to make environmentalists happy?”
well, in most public bathrooms there isn't a choice anyway, so I just use whatever is available there
Well you just do whatever is available - there's very rarely a choice I think, though the idea that hand dryers spread germs is simply perpetuated by the paper companies to insert sensationalist articles into the media to improve PR. It's just a wild coincidence that when a study says paper towels are better, the paper company is always so thoughtful they pay for the study
So there’s no clear answer to any of this 🤔
Jet dryers pose a public safety hazard for noise levels. In a small tiled room where everything echoes, these things go way over 85dB. Im frankly amazed nobody has sued Dyson in a class action suit for hearing loss.
Is it actually causing measurable damage? It's not a sound you hear for a long period
Love this channel!
So there is no sufficient way to dry your hands. Great. 😒
Nothing is worse than those auto flushing toilets. You'll be half stood up ready to wipe your ass, and this intense suction happens mid wipe and you can feel the splash back hitting you and everything else. Then, as you awkardly fumble the second and third wipe, the stupid sensor trips another half a dozen times sending everyone ass particles at you.
The WHO statement was taken from a perspective talking about killing the coronavirus through hand dryers. Which cannot be used in accordance with spreading of bacteria from a hand dryer. (Just feel like pointing that out. The WHO and CDC is responsible for the safety of the people and recommends drying hands after washing, rather than leaving it to dry on its own. To avoid bacterial/ viral contamination if they accidentally touch other surfaces before it has dried out.)
I don’t need no farting robot blowing bacteria everywhere!
My preferred method is to wait until I get home and use my bathroom but I generally use paper towels over dryers.