How to Save Money on
Restaurant Equipment Repairs
Operators, techs say routine
maintenance of all equipment is key
Steve
Coomes Jul. 3, 2013
Ron, a restaurant equipment
repair
tech, hates repairing steamers.
De-liming
a neglected steamer’s boiler components is “a nightmare I don’t wish on
anybody,” he said. But if operators paid someone to do it regularly before the
calcium build up disables the machine, the problem isn’t terrible and the
steamer could run trouble free for years.
“I know it’s hard enough in
this business to make any money at all,” said Ron, who works for a Midwestern
equipment dealer and service company. “But it’s really cheaper overall to
maintain equipment than repair it, though it’s hard to convince some people of
that.”
A broken tilt-skillet
or oven
is one matter, but failures in refrigeration,
HVAC or hood systems
mean not only hefty repair bills, but also lost revenue if the
operation has to shut down.
“We had an exhaust fan go
out on a Friday night in one of our Cheddar’s, and that’s scary because you’ve
got just minutes until the smoke fills up the kitchen,” said Steve Pottinger,
vice president of operations at the Greer Companies, a Lexington, Ky.,
franchisee of 50 Cheddar’s restaurants. “It was a fan belt that broke,
something that could have been eliminated if it had been checked closer.”
Luckily, the manager
reached a maintenance tech who revived the unit quickly, and customers never
noticed the problem. But Pottinger said that since the incident, the Greer
Co.’s has become increasingly diligent about preventative maintenance.
“We’re big on maintenance
of the entire unit,” said Pottinger. If the equipment failure is small, such as
a microwave, he typically replaces the unit. But if replacement costs are
significant, repairs are made where possible.
“We have a set percentage
of sales set aside for repair and maintenance each year, and I’m confident
that’s the right way to do it,” he added.
After years of relying on
outside vendors to manage maintenance, Greer Co.’s assembled its own team to
handle the task for a cluster of its restaurants in the southeastern U.S. At
units beyond that region, the company makes one-off maintenance deals with
vendors, but Pottinger said he doesn’t prefer that set-up.
“We did contract out a lot
that work a few years ago, but we really couldn’t tell that anything was being
done [to our equipment],” he said. “We started joking that the best thing about
our maintenance company was that they really had the billing down. … We’re glad
we put our own staff together for [repairs and maintenance].”
Famous Dave’s has had
better experiences using outside vendors to maintain its equipment, said Jeff
Abramson, the Minneapolis-based company’s vice president of purchasing.
Currently, Famous Dave’s is contracting with a national firm for preventative
maintenance, though the 186-unit barbecue chain is conducting a limited
experiment with an in-house team.
“Right now we have someone
who takes care of our equipment just in Minnesota because we believe it may be
more cost-effective than going outside,” said Abramson, who added that initial
results are promising. “But we tend to rely on outside expertise for more
complicated repairs.”
In addition to deep fryers,
the chain’s combined smoker-and-hood units
get the most attention, Abramson said, since if they’re not running, its core
product isn’t cooking.
“We have to have repair
people in every area trained to fix those because we can’t be without them
running properly,” he said. And just like Pottinger, Abramson said choosing
outside expert help “has to be done carefully. They really need to know what
they’re doing.”
Joe Pierce, president of
the Commercial
Food Equipment Service Association, advises
restaurateurs to view preventative maintenance on their equipment much as they
would tune-ups for their cars.
“You can drive a car a long
time without changing the oil, and you’re saving money,” he began. “But once it
needs repairing, that cost will be much larger than the cost of just changing
the oil like you should have.”
Preventative maintenance,
he added, “can increase the longevity of equipment tenfold since it’s
performing optimally. That’s where the real savings come in, but that’s the
real challenge of educating operators: convincing them that staying ahead of
the curve is the way to go for the long term.”
Original article from: http://nrn.com/technology/how-save-money-restaurant-equipment-repairs
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