Equipment Operation Setup

Getting commercial kitchen equipment setup and operation right is the difference between a service that runs smoothly and one that stalls at the pass. This hub brings together 24 practical guides on how to use commercial kitchen equipment correctly — from first-time commissioning and calibration through to squeezing peak efficiency out of every appliance during a full-throttle service.

Whether you're commissioning a new fit-out, onboarding kitchen staff, or troubleshooting a unit that isn't performing, these guides are written for hospitality and food service operators who need professional-grade equipment to perform reliably, shift after shift. For the full library of buying, maintenance and operational resources, head back to the Knowledge Hub.

Safe first-time setup & commissioning

A new appliance only delivers on its specifications if it's commissioned correctly. Before you power anything on:

  • Confirm services match the spec. Check electrical phase and amperage, gas type and pressure, water inlet and drainage against the manufacturer's data plate.
  • Allow ventilation and clearance. Maintain the rated clearances around heat-producing equipment and ensure canopy extraction is adequate.
  • Level the unit. Refrigeration, ovens and fryers all rely on being level to drain, seal and heat evenly.
  • Run a commissioning cycle. Bring the unit to temperature empty, check for fault codes, and confirm thermostats and timers read true before loading product.
  • Log the install. Record serial numbers, install dates and settings so service history is traceable.

Gas and three-phase electrical connections should always be completed by a licensed technician. Correct commissioning also protects your cover — review the terms on our warranty information page.

Getting peak efficiency in a busy service

  • Preheat with purpose. Bring ovens, grills and fryers to temperature in time for service — not an hour early.
  • Batch and zone. Group cooking tasks by temperature and use different zones of a range or combi for parallel output.
  • Manage recovery time. Don't overload a fryer or hotplate beyond its recovery capacity.
  • Close the door. Every time a fridge or oven door opens, the unit works harder to recover.

If a single unit is constantly maxed out, it may be time to scale up your commercial cooking equipment or add capacity with a dedicated commercial oven.

Operating specific equipment types well

Cooking lines

Keep ranges, fryers, griddles and combi ovens at stable operating temperature, clean burners and elements regularly, and respect recovery times during peak covers.

Refrigeration

Commercial fridges and freezers run hardest when poorly loaded. Keep airflow paths clear, avoid packing product against the evaporator, and don't load warm food directly into a chiller.

Holding & transport

Bain-maries, holding cabinets and catering trolleys bridge production and service. Hold hot food above the safe temperature threshold and cold food below it — never use a holding unit to reheat.

Staff training & workflow

  • Walk the controls. Make sure every operator understands the thermostat, timer, and safety cut-out before they run a unit solo.
  • Document a startup and shutdown sequence. A printed open/close checklist keeps things consistent across shifts.
  • Build cleaning into the workflow. Schedule daily, weekly and deep-clean tasks.
  • Assign ownership. When each shift knows who checks fridge temperatures and who shuts down the line, nothing falls through the gaps.

Avoiding common operating mistakes

  • Overloading past rated capacity degrades performance and shortens service life.
  • Skipping cleaning forces equipment to work harder for the same result.
  • Ignoring early warning signs — unusual noise, longer recovery times, inconsistent temperatures.
  • Using equipment outside its purpose — a holding cabinet isn't an oven; a display fridge isn't a blast chiller.
  • Neglecting water quality — scale is a leading cause of failure in combi ovens, dishwashers and steamers.

Talk to a commercial equipment specialist. Call 1300 000 927 or visit our showroom at 151 Parramatta Road, Granville NSW 2142.

Frequently asked questions

How do I set up commercial kitchen equipment for the first time?

Confirm your services — electrical phase and amperage, gas type and pressure, and water supply — match the manufacturer's data plate. Level the unit, allow the rated clearances, then run an empty commissioning cycle. Gas and three-phase connections must be completed by a licensed technician.

How can I get the most out of my commercial appliances?

Run equipment to its rated capacity rather than overloading it, preheat only as far ahead of service as needed, keep components clean so heat transfer and airflow stay efficient, and train staff to minimise unnecessary door openings.

What's the most common commercial kitchen equipment mistake?

Overloading and skipped cleaning. Pushing a unit beyond its recovery capacity gives inconsistent results, while grease and scale force equipment to work harder.

Should commercial kitchen equipment be commissioned by a technician?

Gas connections and three-phase electrical work must be carried out by a licensed technician. Once installed, you can run the commissioning cycle and operational checks yourself.