eBuilding Service technician Tony Publicover, explains the importance of planned maintenance on restaurant equipment while performing a reach in glass cooler repair. Coil cleaning on a regular basis will help keep repair costs down. eBuilding Service provides HVAC/R and Cooking Equipment Planned maintenance as well as General Maintenance, Commercial Handyman and Tenant Finish repairs.
October 28, 2010
eBuilding Service Technician performs repair to reach in glass cooler in bar.
September 23, 2009
Caring for and repairing older equipment during the tough economy can help operators reduce expenses.
Making the most of expensive equipment such as fryers, walk-in freezers, and H-VAC systems through careful maintenance and selection of replacement parts seems like a no-brainer, especially during cash-strapped times when quick-serves face higher costs for everything from labor to energy.
But surprisingly, the upkeep of these kitchen mainstays is often a neglected portion of the overall restaurant budget, as more regular line items such as food, non-perishables, and payroll garner closer scrutiny. A careful examination of procedures for day-to-day equipment maintenance, procurement, and training can yield hidden savings, industry experts say.
“We extend the philosophy of making it last to every piece of equipment that we own,” says Bill Sassman, assistant service supervisor for 83 White Castle hamburger outlets in the Chicago region. “We have Shake Masters that have been in the field for over 20 years.”
Sassman says that foodservice suppliers often joke when they notice the age of the equipment in White Castle kitchens. But he and his stores’ managers are having the last laugh—they have a profit-sharing program that provides strong incentives to extend the operational life of everything from griddles to soda fountains.
“Procrastinating on service repairs can be tempting, especially when budgets are lean. But as margins tighten, it’s essential to keep parts like knobs and gaskets in good condition through regular maintenance and repair, ensuring that equipment doesn’t suffer an unexpected breakdown and cause the kitchen to close temporarily.
“You’re spending money but you prolong the life of the equipment and keep the quality of the food that’s coming out … at a high level,” says Arnold Kimmons, director of sales and marketing for Franklin Machine Products, among the largest suppliers of replacement parts to professional kitchens.
Sales of latches, hinges, and other parts have risen amid the economic downturn at Lumberton, New Jersey-based FMP. Kimmons says operators are paying closer attention to the longevity of their equipment.
If a chain has scale, another smart way to wring savings from the equipment budget is by taking advantage of a parts catalog designed specifically for your restaurant concept. In recent years, franchisors at some of the largest U.S. chains have been developing these arrangements to simplify purchases for franchisees.
“Parts had kind of been off the radar screen and done at the franchisee level,” says Steve Snower, president of Lombard, Illinois–based Parts Town, which supplies OEM parts including pilot assemblies, burners, circuit boards, and control modules. “There’s a fairly significant trend toward quick-serves looking for parts partnerships.”
Having such an umbrella agreement can lead to volume discounts and other efficiencies that sometimes save individual franchisees in excess of 20 percent annually over the cost of buying replacement parts on their own, Snower says.
Scott Martenson, owner of a Culver’s restaurant in the Chicago suburbs, says the familiarity of dealing with a single source can lead to unexpected benefits. When he recently sought to replace panels on his fryer, Martenson discovered the Culvers’s custom catalog, which Parts Town designed, showed he only needed to replace the panels’ Mylar coverings, resulting in significant savings.
“This is an industry where you need to keep those costs low and keep your value up,” Martenson says. “You have to become a lot more intimate with your equipment on a day-to-day basis.”
Even so, training, considered essential to keeping equipment in working order, is frequently neglected. But with a labor pool dominated by young, often-inexperienced workers, it’s essential that operators emphasize how to operate and clean microwaves, grills, and other kitchen workhorses.
Mike Smalley, owner of Middletown, Maryland-based equipment service company MDS Mechanical, estimates that some 20 to 40 percent of the calls he makes to fast-food restaurants stem from abuse of equipment that could be prevented through education.
“People don’t take care of equipment,” says Smalley, noting that the most common violations he sees include broken hinges from slammed doors, compressors that break down when the doors of freezers and refrigerators are left propped open and cracked gaskets resulting from lack of cleaning. “Restaurant managers should be doing training,” he says.
