Commercial catering equipment is engineered for hard work, but there are parts which
have a finite life and need replacing eventually. Hopefully, a part that is nearing
the end of its working life will be spotted by a regular service visit from an engineer
who will be able to visually check items such as door gaskets or use technical testing
equipment to spot impending trouble on switches or pumps.
For some caterers, cost is an issue on every aspect of purchasing and so when the
cost of a spare part and fitting it is given by the inspecting engineer, there is
a temptation to see if there is a cheaper way of effecting the repair.
The first and most important point is that if the item which needs a spare part
is gas-powered then it has to be done by an engineer who has the official CORGI
(now Gas Safe) certification.
Gas Safe Register has replaced CORGI in Great Britain and the Isle of Man. The register
exists to protect you, your family, and your property from dangerous gas work.
By law, anyone carrying out work on gas installations and appliances in your home
must be on the Gas Safe Register. Be gas safe - always use a Gas Safe registered
engineer.
Always ask to see their Gas Safe Register ID card.
It is illegal for anyone else to touch commercial gas equipment and that includes
a Gas Safe registered engineer whose registration is only for domestic equipment.
With electrical or mechanical spare parts, few restaurant chefs have the time or
knowledge to source and fit, but large hotels often have a general maintenance man
who can do jobs like unblock drains, men damaged furniture, fix a light fitting
on the wall and knows how to restart the boiler if the pilot light goes out. There
is the temptation to save money by buying a spare part independently and having
the maintenance man fit it. Or it might be that there is a general electrical business
in the town who has a service engineer who says "a switch is a switch - they are
all the same" and offers a cheaper price than a trained kitchen engineer.
There are also companies who have long recognised that the cost of spare parts on
all kinds of electrical and mechanical equipment is a business opportunity. They
have recognised the most common spare parts needed from the popular manufacturers
and buy in a limited range in bulk to earn a discount they can use as a competitive
advantage.
Manufacturers of commercial catering equipment are no different to any manufacturer
and will buy in some components from a specialist supplier. An oven manufacturer
is not going to make its own door seals or printed circuit boards. Mail order spare
part suppliers know this and will buy the popular components direct to buy cheaper
than through the kitchen equipment manufacturer. For a manufacturer to hold every
spare part in stock no matter how rarely it goes wrong carries with it a cost that
the independent spare part company will not have.
Spare parts in the commercial kitchen market are just like car spare parts. There
are the branded parts supplied through the manufacturer and generic parts which
a third-party supplier will offer as a suitable alternative. Sometimes, but not
always, buying a generic spare part is cheaper. Most times, but not always, the
generic spare part will work. But while that sounds an attractive route to buying
spare parts, avoiding the original equipment manufacturer carries with it risks.
The independent parts supplier will be spares for the popular makes and all the
parts which regularly wear out, but it is unlikely to stock all spare parts. Neither
is it likely to have the same depth of spare part knowledge as the original equipment
manufacturer. The spare part may be listed in a catalogue as being for a particular
piece of kitchen equipment, but it might not be the exact same component that the
manufacturer was using, so the durability of the replacement part may not be as
good as the original. This is very important when the spare part is a generic one,
not from the manufacturer.
Even more fraught with risk is buying spare through internet sites. In addition
to the difficulties already outlined, there is no one to talk to and component part
numbers change frequently. A part that fits a five-year-old piece of equipment may
not fit a four-year-old version.
Please
contact caterstop.com
to buy spare parts for catering equipment.