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Restaurant Services
By law, kitchen exhaust cleaning is required for virtually every commercial
cooking establishment in the United States. Restaurants, hospitals,
hotels, employee cafeterias and other food-service locations have
a "hood" and ductwork over the stove to exhaust smoke, steam, and
fumes out of the building. These exhaust gases leave a residue on
the inside of the ductwork. This is usually a grease residue of some
sort, depending on the type of cooking. Char broilers commonly leave
heavy black grease. Chinese cooking normally deposits a sticky or
rubbery residue. When a charcoal or wood-burning stove is in use,
soot and ash residue builds up in the ductwork. Dishwashers leave
heavy lint deposits.
When the buildup of grease becomes heavy, a fire hazard exists. Approximately
one of three restaurant fires is caused by grease. A common scenario
of how a kitchen exhaust fire starts is this:
- A flame flares up on the stove.
- The fire contacts the filters above the stove on the kitchen
hood. The filters ignite.
- Since the exhaust fan is on, drawing air into the hood, through
the filters, and up the duct, the flame on the filters is pulled
into the duct.
- If significant grease residue exists on the duct interior, this
can act as a fuel and the fire spreads up the duct, perhaps all
the way into the fan. We have seen fire climb up a ten-story duct
to the fan on the roof and burn up the fan.
Modern duct construction is designed to hopefully withstand such duct
fires. The duct seams are welded to prevent grease or fire from leaking
out and the shafts around the duct are made of fire- resistive materials.
However, older buildings are still at risk, and even in modern ones
the fire may leak out or could come out onto the roof via the fan.
When an exhaust system is cleaned regularly, however, the chances
of a duct fire are extremely remote. In virtually all the duct fires
we have seen in our 25 years of experience, the ducts were extremely
laden with grease or other flammable material.
METHODS OF CLEANING
There are two primary methods of cleaning kitchen exhaust ductwork:
- Scraping.
- Pressure washing or steam cleaning.
The primary method used in California is scraping. This is the more
economical method and is extremely effective when done thoroughly.
We know of no duct fires which have occurred because of using this
method (unless it was done poorly). Scraping of duct systems complies
with the Uniform Fire Code which is the governing fire code of the
state of California. The cleaning method for kitchen exhausts most
often used by Action Duct Cleaning is the scraping method.
The alternative to scraping is pressure washing or steam cleaning.
This is a more costly and time consuming technique, since it requires
considerable prep work to control waste water and more expensive equipment
is involved. However, this method will clean ductwork down to "bare
metal," which is the recommendation of the National Fire Protection
Association (NFPA) as spelled out in NFPA Standard 96.
At Action Duct Cleaning, we frequently do pressure washing of kitchen
exhausts as well as scraping. This is done for a variety of reasons.
Sometimes the ductwork may be inaccessible for scraping or the client
simply wants to take the extra precautionary step of having it cleaned
to "bare metal."
HOW OFTEN SHOULD A KITCHEN EXHAUST BE CLEANED?
The most common cleaning frequency is every 3 months. This can vary,
however. The kitchen exhaust systems that need cleaning most often
are those over wood-burning or charcoal-burning stoves. These should
be cleaned every month at least, and in some cases as often as every
2 weeks.
Below are various types of cooking establishments and their most commonly
recommended cleaning frequencies.
- Wood-burning or charcoal-burning stoves, char broilers, 24-hour
restaurants, some hamburger places: 30 DAYS.
- Many hamburger restaurants and fast-food locations: 60 DAYS.
- Average restaurant, employee cafeteria, hotel or hospital kitchen:
90 DAYS.
- Pizza places, convalescent hospital, small snack bar, oven hood:
180 DAYS.
- Hoods over non-grease-creating appliances, such as steam kettles,
dishwashers, soup vats, etc.: ONE YEAR.
Kitchen exhaust cleaning is a standard part of the routine maintenance
of any cooking establishment. All kitchen managers or restaurant owners
should be aware of its role in fire prevention and ensure it is done
on a regular basis.
THE ACTION DUCT GUARANTEE: All of our
work is guaranteed to pass fire, health, and insurance inspection.
Action Duct Cleaning has over 25 years of kitchen exhaust cleaning
expertise. For further information or a free estimate, click
here today.
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