If you dump too much at once you can block the drains, if you must dump coffee grounds down the drain choose the widest drain, (toilet or waste disposal) and flush with lots of water.
It will work, but if you have a garbage bin nearby that's better.
To improve the smell of your garbage disposal, you can try running ice cubes and citrus peels through it, using baking soda and vinegar, or grinding coffee grounds in it. Regularly cleaning and maintaining your garbage disposal can also help prevent odors.
Improper disposal of garbage can lead to pollution of soil, water, and air, which can harm ecosystems and wildlife. It can also create breeding grounds for disease-carrying organisms, leading to health risks for humans. Additionally, unsightly litter can negatively impact the aesthetic value of an area and reduce property values.
Dumping grounds are busy places because they receive a high volume of waste from households, businesses, and industries. Waste management activities such as sorting, recycling, and disposal require continuous work to efficiently process the incoming waste. Additionally, the need for proper handling and disposal of different types of waste materials contributes to the busy nature of dumping grounds.
A disposal creates centrifugal force and acts as a pump. Often a blocked or partially blocked sink drain can result in slow drains and a disposal will force water through. If it really is the disposal, try slowly adding coffee grounds and/or fibrous material like broccoli centers or pineapple centers while cold water and the disposal are running. If that doesn't solve the problem, have the drain cleaned and make certain that the drain vent works.
The are use to despose garbage
NIMBY
No because it is a powdery kinda thing and then since it is wet from the water it will stick but that's why i think it is not OK to put coffee grounds in a disposal. Thanks bye sexy baby What do I do with them as they do not want to be poured from Bodom coffee pot?
Coffee Grounds Down Garbage DisposalsFrom what I've read, yes, and no. I hate getting rid of the grounds from my french press, so I've done a bit of online research. If you have a septic tank, the answer is no. Solids of any kind contribute to the build up of sludge in the tank, which means having it work less efficently, and having it cleaned out more often. If you have a sewer connection, as long as your pipes aren't prone to clogging, I can't see any harm if you flush it well with water. But it could get trapped in the bend under the sink too. So it depends on how your pipes are connected.Garbage disposals are the real question mark. I've found two websites that encourage regular grinding of coffee grounds as a way of scouring and freshening up the drain. At least one manufacturer's site says grounds are perfectly fine. On the other hand, some sites put coffee grinds on the same level as corn husks, which I know from direct observation to be a bad idea in the disposal.Why don't you start a compost pile and use the grounds there? I take grounds from anybody I know for the pile. Wish I could get more. Makes it smell good, too.I just add more water to my french press and then swirl and toss out the door or window into the bushes. Coffee grounds are a good source of nitrogen.Doesn't hurt a thing.I've been putting coffee grounds down the disposal for years with no problems. Only have it pumped out on ten year basis. Two in the house and 1000 gallon septic tank. Why have a disposer if you can't flush all your garbage?It really just depends on your plumbing system. I have a french press and an espresso machine. I find that the best way of getting rid of the french press is simply dump in in the trash if the grounds are only slightly moist. Otherwise compost piles are great and the coffee grounds work great for keeping some animals out of your garden. As far as the espresso machine portafilter is concerned. I found a mini puck dispenser at a specialty coffee supplier that sits on the counter. It looks much like the ones you see in coffee houses with the padded bar in the middle to hit the portafilter on to remove the espresso puck.Garbage disposals are not for flushing your excess food down the sink, it is for disposing of the small bits of food that may not make it down the sink AFTER you have scraped off all you can...Coffee grounds form cement in a garbage disposal (description of repair person). Had to dispose of the disposal. I suspect inadequate water flush contributed to the problem. We were conserving water in the middle of a drought. Not willing to take the chance and do it again tho.DO NOT PUT COFFEE GROUNDS IN YOUR DISPOSAL. A plumber is at my house this very instant cleaning coffee grounds out of my drain. A couple hundred bucks gone because of coffee grounds.
Just get it to turn, maybe it will need a little help, so use that tool that came with it and connect it to the bottom of the disposal and turn it enough to make sure it will work. If the plumbing is plugged, pull the pipes apart and remove as much of the paint as you can. Then put it all back together, and run coffee grounds, egg shells, cauliflower hearts or any other "tough" material through.
check you grounds and the alternator
This sounds like a situation for the police.