Plain and simple: Press the button, and water pours out violently — no thick espresso stream at all. Your first thought? “Call the tech, the machine is toast.”

Hold your horses. After years in the trenches of barista troubleshooting, I’ll tell you a secret: 80% of flow issues aren't mechanical failures. It’s usually a sloppy puck or a $3 part that needs replacing. I’ve been there, done that, and wasted way too much good coffee.
Here are the 5 real reasons your shot is gushing, ranked from operator screw-ups to hardware hacks.
1. The Tamping Fail: Micro-Fissures in the Puck
This is the #1 reason for espresso channeling that everyone loves to blame on the machine. Listen, your tamping technique matters more than your fancy grinder. If you tamp unevenly or it’s not firm enough, the water pressure will just blast through the weak spots in the coffee bed like it’s nothing.
How to fix it: Give the portafilter a gentle tap after tamping. If the puck shifts or feels loose, you didn't lock it in. Tamp vertically, apply consistent pressure, and stop trying to be fancy. No one cares if you spin the tamper like a DJ.
2. Grind Size Too Coarse: The "Sponge" Test
This is pure physics. I see rookies mess up their coffee extraction all the time because they ignore grind size adjustment. Using light roasts? You gotta grind finer than your usual dark roast, period.
How to fix it: Look at the resistance. If the tamper sinks into the coffee like it's soft butter or a sponge, it's way too coarse. Don't try to fix physics with more pressure. You'll just crack the puck. Just grind finer. End of story.
3. The Portafilter Basket Tolerance
Stop trusting that "genuine" label blindly. Mass-produced baskets have variances. One basket works perfect; another of the exact same model gushes like a busted faucet. It makes your solid tamping technique look useless.
How to fix it: Swap the basket. If the flow stabilizes instantly, you have a wonky basket. Hold it up to the light; if the holes aren't perfectly uniform, toss it. It’s not worth the headache.
4. The Shower Screen Gunk Trap
You wipe the group head, but what about behind it? Old coffee oils bake onto the shower screen, clogging half the holes. This chokes the water flow and screws up your coffee extraction.
How to fix it: Unscrew that nasty thing and soak it. If the brown sludge that comes off makes you want to puke, congrats—you found the issue.
5. The Group Gasket's Retirement Party
That black rubber ring gets a groove worn into it over time. When it can't hold the portafilter flush anymore, water leaks from the sides, causing espresso channeling that looks like a flood.
How to fix it: Lock in an empty portafilter. If water sprays out sideways instead of down, the gasket is shot. Replace it. Costs less than a latte.
Bottom line: Don't pay a technician $200 to tell you your grinder is set wrong or your gasket is old. Real barista troubleshooting starts with checking these five things first. Save your money for better beans.









