Garbage cans manage household waste effectively in daily routines. They receive papers, packaging, and organic scraps, holding contents securely with lids in place under typical volumes.
Contents build steadily until bags occupy nearly all available space. The interior fills from bottom to top, pressing outward against the walls.
At this boundary, the lid seats firmly over the uppermost bags. Containment holds steady, enclosing the waste completely with no excess room.
The can continues to store items as designed, supporting bagged refuse up to this filled extent. Access for pressing down final pieces becomes constrained, yet enclosure remains effective.
Here, the garbage can functions at its volumetric edge, utilizing space to the limit while preserving normal containment.
