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#1
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"willshak" wrote in message
m... Mike wrote the following: So I'm cleaning up the kitchen last night after getting the kids to bed, running some water in the sink as I rinse dishes. The side of the sink with the disposal starts to fill up a bit, so I do the usual - click on the disposal to clear the junk out and let the water flow. Except this time the water didn't begin flowing. I heard the motor run when I flipped the switch, but nothing happened. I pull out the rubber piece in the sink, put on a glove and reach in a bit (yes, I know this is ill-advised). There is, of course, a bunch of food in there. I take a moment to scoop out as much as I can and then shine a flashlight into the disposal. I see in there the nut that holds the flywheel to the spinning bolt, but the nut is not in the middle like it should be. I fish out the nut and it's got part of the bolt still in it. In short, the bolt that come up the middle from the motor has broken and the top portion of the bolt is still in the nut. Good grief. I set the fly wheel back in the center so that I can see the top of the bolt, and then turn on the motor briefly. Yep, the bolt still turns, but without the nut holding the flywheel to the bolt, the flywheel just sits there. Off to google, search string "garbage disposal repair". Tons of results for things like unclogging a disposal, resetting a disposal, but nothing that addresses my situation. So what do you think? Is this fixable, or is a replacement disposal the only viable way to go? If I do end up getting a plan to fix the unit, it seems like pulling teh disposal from the sink will be the only way to get down into the guts where the bolt meets the motor. Thanks for any info/advice. Mike Remove the disposer and replace it with a piece of drain pipe. What do you need a disposal for? Dumping pieces of garbage into your septic tank, or worse, the municipal sewer system, which has to work extra to remove that crap before they release the treated water into the waterways? Get a cheap garbage can and scrape the waste from the dishes into it. I hear some places actually have some kind of service where trucks come and pick up the garbage for you. Of course there is a fee. -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ I agree..Disposers are a waste of money and bad for the septic system....Put you veggie peelings , ect. in your mulch pile and left over food in the garbage where it belongs... |
#2
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On Apr 22, 2:46*pm, "benick" wrote:
"willshak" wrote in message m... Mike wrote the following: So I'm cleaning up the kitchen last night after getting the kids to bed, running some water in the sink as I rinse dishes. *The side of the sink with the disposal starts to fill up a bit, so I do the usual - click on the disposal to clear the junk out and let the water flow. Except this time the water didn't begin flowing. *I heard the motor run when I flipped the switch, but nothing happened. *I pull out the rubber piece in the sink, put on a glove and reach in a bit (yes, I know this is ill-advised). *There is, of course, a bunch of food in there. *I take a moment to scoop out as much as I can and then shine a flashlight into the disposal. *I see in there the nut that holds the flywheel to the spinning bolt, but the nut is not in the middle like it should be. *I fish out the nut and it's got part of the bolt still in it. *In short, the bolt that come up the middle from the motor has broken and the top portion of the bolt is still in the nut. *Good grief. *I set the fly wheel back in the center so that I can see the top of the bolt, and then turn on the motor briefly. *Yep, the bolt still turns, but without the nut holding the flywheel to the bolt, the flywheel just sits there. *Off to google, search string "garbage disposal repair". *Tons of results for things like unclogging a disposal, resetting a disposal, but nothing that addresses my situation. So what do you think? *Is this fixable, or is a replacement disposal the only viable way to go? *If I do end up getting a plan to fix the unit, it seems like pulling teh disposal from the sink will be the only way to get down into the guts where the bolt meets the motor. Thanks for any info/advice. Mike Remove the disposer and replace it with a piece of drain pipe. What do you need a disposal for? Dumping pieces of garbage into your septic tank, or worse, the municipal sewer system, which has to work extra to remove that crap before they release the treated water into the waterways? Get a cheap garbage can and scrape the waste from the dishes into it. I hear some places actually have some kind of service where trucks come and pick up the garbage for you. Of course there is a fee. -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ I agree..Disposers are a waste of money and bad for the septic system....Put you veggie peelings , ect. in your mulch pile and left over food in the garbage where it belongs...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I see the Amish with computers have invaded. LOL. Darn all that newfangled technology and convenience! 1. Disposers are not a waste of money. They are cheap, and the time savings is significant. I probably save 10 minutes a day because of them by not having to scrape plates into a separate container (making a mess to clean up), and not transfering peelings and other food prep items out of the sink, and by being able to wipe the counters clean directly into the sink (juices and all), with no spillage on the floor or cabinet faces. 2. Ground foodstuffs from disposals not "bad" for the septic system any more than human feces. This has been proven repeatedly. You just have to adjust your pumping schedule as recommended on septic tank pumping schedule charts to account for the slight increase in mass. The bacteria in your tank doesn't care if it breaks down feces or ground peelings. You anti-disposal folks probably already have a disposal if you know it or not. Your dishwasher likely has one built in. I know, I know... we don't need no newfangled dishwahers... or 'Lectricity, or yer fancy toilets. *sigh* |
#3
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P.S. Aside from all the convenience and time-savings, my garbage
disposal has already paid for itself in reduced garbage pick-up rates alone. I'd have to pay for an extra container each week without it. |
#4
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Jeff The Drunk wrote:
On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 15:18:05 -0700 (PDT), mike wrote: P.S. Aside from all the convenience and time-savings, my garbage disposal has already paid for itself in reduced garbage pick-up rates alone. I'd have to pay for an extra container each week without it. I take the drain off my disposal and use it to make coleslaw. Also use it to make milk shake smoothies. ![]() |
#5
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mike wrote:
P.S. Aside from all the convenience and time-savings, my garbage disposal has already paid for itself in reduced garbage pick-up rates alone. I'd have to pay for an extra container each week without it. How do you display your environmental concerns? |
#6
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"mike" wrote in message
... On Apr 22, 2:46 pm, "benick" wrote: "willshak" wrote in message m... Mike wrote the following: So I'm cleaning up the kitchen last night after getting the kids to bed, running some water in the sink as I rinse dishes. The side of the sink with the disposal starts to fill up a bit, so I do the usual - click on the disposal to clear the junk out and let the water flow. Except this time the water didn't begin flowing. I heard the motor run when I flipped the switch, but nothing happened. I pull out the rubber piece in the sink, put on a glove and reach in a bit (yes, I know this is ill-advised). There is, of course, a bunch of food in there. I take a moment to scoop out as much as I can and then shine a flashlight into the disposal. I see in there the nut that holds the flywheel to the spinning bolt, but the nut is not in the middle like it should be. I fish out the nut and it's got part of the bolt still in it. In short, the bolt that come up the middle from the motor has broken and the top portion of the bolt is still in the nut. Good grief. I set the fly wheel back in the center so that I can see the top of the bolt, and then turn on the motor briefly. Yep, the bolt still turns, but without the nut holding the flywheel to the bolt, the flywheel just sits there. Off to google, search string "garbage disposal repair". Tons of results for things like unclogging a disposal, resetting a disposal, but nothing that addresses my situation. So what do you think? Is this fixable, or is a replacement disposal the only viable way to go? If I do end up getting a plan to fix the unit, it seems like pulling teh disposal from the sink will be the only way to get down into the guts where the bolt meets the motor. Thanks for any info/advice. Mike Remove the disposer and replace it with a piece of drain pipe. What do you need a disposal for? Dumping pieces of garbage into your septic tank, or worse, the municipal sewer system, which has to work extra to remove that crap before they release the treated water into the waterways? Get a cheap garbage can and scrape the waste from the dishes into it. I hear some places actually have some kind of service where trucks come and pick up the garbage for you. Of course there is a fee. -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ I agree..Disposers are a waste of money and bad for the septic system....Put you veggie peelings , ect. in your mulch pile and left over food in the garbage where it belongs...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I see the Amish with computers have invaded. LOL. Darn all that newfangled technology and convenience! 1. Disposers are not a waste of money. They are cheap, and the time savings is significant. I probably save 10 minutes a day because of them by not having to scrape plates into a separate container (making a mess to clean up), and not transfering peelings and other food prep items out of the sink, and by being able to wipe the counters clean directly into the sink (juices and all), with no spillage on the floor or cabinet faces. 2. Ground foodstuffs from disposals not "bad" for the septic system any more than human feces. This has been proven repeatedly. You just have to adjust your pumping schedule as recommended on septic tank pumping schedule charts to account for the slight increase in mass. The bacteria in your tank doesn't care if it breaks down feces or ground peelings. You anti-disposal folks probably already have a disposal if you know it or not. Your dishwasher likely has one built in. I know, I know... we don't need no newfangled dishwahers... or 'Lectricity, or yer fancy toilets. *sigh* Calm done , you're gonna blow a gasket or something...You really do need to stay on your meds.... |
#7
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Clot wrote:
mike wrote: P.S. Aside from all the convenience and time-savings, my garbage disposal has already paid for itself in reduced garbage pick-up rates alone. I'd have to pay for an extra container each week without it. How do you display your environmental concerns? Usually with an extended middle finger. Why do you ask? |
#8
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benick wrote:
I agree..Disposers are a waste of money and bad for the septic system....Put you veggie peelings , ect. in your mulch pile and left over food in the garbage where it belongs... I used to have an organic garbage disposal. It was called "dog." Mine, like the OP's, died, and I'm now back to using the artificial, electrical, dog. |
#9
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On Apr 23, 9:45*am, "HeyBub" wrote:
Clot wrote: mike wrote: P.S. *Aside from all the convenience and time-savings, my garbage disposal has already paid for itself in reduced garbage pick-up rates alone. *I'd have to pay for an extra container each week without it. How do you display your environmental concerns? Usually with an extended middle finger. Why do you ask? I do something far more useful. I vote (98%) Republican. |
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