Welcome to another 86 Repairs Guide! In this series, we provide valuable troubleshooting, preventative maintenance, and warranty information on the equipment and infrastructure found in your restaurant. We hope this information will help you and your team become more informed about repairs and maintenance (R&M)—and save you time and money along the way.
Working in restaurants, you already know that a lot of venting happens in the kitchen:
“That eight top only left me a $10 tip!”
“Table 28 sent their steak back…again.”
“This lady in the drive-thru is demanding a catering order for 40 right now!”
Folks in the trenches need to let off steam to keep their cool. But did you know the equipment in your kitchen needs to let some steam off, too? Enter an unsung hero of the back of house: restaurant hoods.
Hood systems collect the hot, polluted air produced while cooking and replace it with temperate, clean air, keeping everyone inside comfortable and safe from contaminants.
If the hood isn’t working properly or won’t turn on at all, kitchens quickly become hot, smoky, and out of compliance with your local AHJ.
Don’t let equipment failures abduct your restaurant. Check out our preventative maintenance, troubleshooting, and warranty advice for hood systems in this guide.
A restaurant hood system is a type of ventilation that pulls things like fumes, smoke, steam, and exhaust out of the kitchen and replaces them with fresh air. You may also know it as an exhaust hood or range hood. Hood systems are required in every kitchen that contains hot side units, and they’re also extremely common in kitchens with large commercial dishwashers.
Restaurant hood systems are essentially their own HVAC systems. They include the hood itself, which collects pollutants; an exhaust fan, which mechanically pulls the pollutants up and out of the kitchen; and a makeup system, which is a vent directly in front of the hood that replaces polluted air with fresh air. The makeup system cools or heats air to keep cooks comfortable, creates an air curtain so fumes stay under the hood, and balances air pressure.
But why do those pollutants need to be pulled out in the first place? For one, it prevents the buildup of smoke and fumes. It also helps keep the chefs and cooks on the line cool, exchanging hot air from the oven or kitchen with something temperate from outside.
Most importantly, restaurant hood systems help collect the oil that collects in a kitchen. If a hood isn’t working properly, or if its grease trays are too full, those oils can ignite and create a massive column of flames that’s extremely difficult to put out. This leaves the entire building at risk of burning down, jeopardizing the well-being of your staff, customers, and community.
Leave the inferno to Dante. Preventative maintenance can help your hood system run as it should, and troubleshooting might avoid expensive vendor invoices and downtime.
Because restaurant hood systems act as their own HVAC units, we log their repair data with other HVAC infrastructure issues reported by our customers.
In our annual report, The State of Repairs, we shared that HVAC issues comprised 12.4% of repair requests from restaurants in 2021. That’s pretty significant when you consider every other piece of equipment in a kitchen—and pretty concerning when you learn the average cost of HVAC repairs.
With expenses high and success rates low, restaurants must be proactive about hood system maintenance and troubleshooting before emergency strikes.
Preventive maintenance for restaurants helps businesses avoid downtime and unnecessary breakdowns, all while reducing maintenance costs and extensive lead times on parts and labor. Here are some simple preventative maintenance ideas you can implement for the hood systems in your restaurants:
We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: hood systems act as their own HVAC systems. Because of how complicated they are, the vast majority of cleaning is done by contracted vendors.
Check National Fire Protection Agency (NFPA) and local AHJ guidelines for how often your hood should be cleaned. Hoods must be in compliance with cleaning frequencies or your restaurant could be fined.
The NFPA 96 includes the following guidance:
Include these appointments as part of your overarching preventative maintenance schedules.
As oils and fumes condense inside the hood, the grease will drop down into the grease trays on the unit. These should never be anywhere close to full—otherwise, you risk creating a deadly column of fire. (Sounds dramatic, but it’s true.)
Check and empty the grease trays bi-weekly or monthly to make sure you’re safe.
Restaurant hoods contain filters known as baffles that can be removed and cleaned for optimal pollutant removal. If your restaurant has heavy grease production, clean baffles nightly. For lower volume restaurants, clean them every other day or weekly.
To find the baffles on your unit, look at the back of the hood for pleated panels with small metal handles. Lift and remove them and clean them with a degreasing solution. Before putting them back, make sure they’re completely dry.
Though most maintenance needs to be done by specialized professionals, there are a few everyday things your team can do, too:
Ensure you have fire extinguishers, fire suppression systems, and smoke detectors in place; inspect and maintain them in accordance with the NFPA and your local AHJ.
If your hood system isn’t working properly, there are a few things you can look into to try and resolve the issue before you spend the time and money on an HVAC vendor:
If your vent hood won’t turn on, you can’t remove the polluted air from your kitchen and create an unsafe, and highly scented, environment for your employees and guests. Before you call a vendor,
If your hood still won’t turn on after running through those troubleshooting tips, it’s time to call in an expert.
You want as many contaminants as possible captured in the grease traps of your hood system. If you notice grease streaks running down the unit, it’s because something in the unit isn’t working properly, causing oil and water to mix and drip out.
If this is happening,
Most issues with your makeup air unit for the restaurant hood system will need to be addressed. But before you call a vendor, keep in mind:
Most restaurant hood systems don’t have long warranties. You’re likely looking at coverage for a year—two at best—and it won’t include commonly replaced parts like belts or lightbulbs.
Reach out to your manufacturer if you’re unsure about your warranty. And keep in mind that, if your restaurant is a new building that went up within the past year, you’ll need to check with your general contractor for warranty status. They’ll usually cover your repairs for that first year.
Preventative maintenance on hood systems can protect your people from unsafe conditions, and troubleshooting can help avoid spending extra money on vendor dispatch. So the next time your hood is acting up, we hope you’ll use this guide to bring some fresh air into your approach to repairs.