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1

Your cooker should give you many years of 
trouble-free cooking if installed and operated 
correctly. It is important that you read this 
section before you start.

Personal Safety 

This appliance is for cooking purposes only. 
It must not be used for other purposes, for 
example heating a room. Using it for any 
other purpose could invalidate any warranty 
or liability claim. Besides invalidating claims 
this wastes fuel and may overheat the control 
knobs. 

This appliance is for use in Great Britain and 
the Republic of Ireland. It is a Cat II2H3+ cooker 

and is set for G20 at 20 mbar. (A conversion kit 
for LPG is available for the cooker).

• 

This appliance can be used by children 
aged from 8 years and above and persons 
with reduced physical, sensory or mental 
capabilities or lack of experience and 
knowledge if they have been given 
supervision or instruction concerning 
use of the appliance in a safe way and 
understand the hazards involved. 

• 

WARNING: 

Children 

less

 than 8 years 

of age should be kept away unless 
continuously supervised. Children shall not 
play with the appliance. Cleaning and user 
maintenance shall not be made by children 
without supervision.

• 

The cooker should not be placed on a base.

• 

This appliance is designed for domestic 
cooking only. Use for any other purpose 
could invalidate any warranty or liability 
claim.

• 

Before operating the ovens please refer 
to the oven shelf installation, in the 
Accessories section.

• 

WARNING:

 The appliance and its 

accessible parts become hot during use 

and will retain heat even after you have 
stopped cooking. Care should be taken to 
avoid touching heating elements. Children 
less than 8 years of age shall be kept away 
unless continuously supervised.

• 

CAUTION:

 A long term cooking process 

has to be supervised from time to time. 
A short term cooking process has to be 
supervised continuously.

• 

At the risk of fire 

DO NOT

 store items on 

the cooking surfaces.

• 

To avoid overheating, 

DO NOT

 install the 

cooker behind a decorative door. 

• 

WARNING:

 Accessible parts will become 

hot during use and will retain heat even 
after you have stopped cooking. Keep 
babies and children away from the cooker 
and never wear loose-fitting or hanging 
clothes when using the appliance.

• 

DO NOT

 use a steam cleaner on your 

cooker.

• 

Always keep combustible materials, e.g. 
curtains, and flammable liquids a safe 
distance away from the cooker.

• 

DO NOT 

spray aerosols in the vicinity of 

the cooker while it is on.

Electrical Connection Safety

A Gas Safe registered engineer should service 
the cooker and only approved spare parts 
should be used.

The electrical installation must be installed 
in accordance with all relevant British 
Standards/Codes of Practice, BS 7671. 
Or with the relevant national and local 
regulations and with the local gas and 
electricity supply companies’ requirements.

Otherwise, all installations must be in 
accordance with the relevant instructions in 
this booklet.

1.   Before You Start...

Summary of Contents for 1000 Induction

Page 1: ...1000 Mercury Dual Fuel USER GUIDE INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS U110086 12a...

Page 2: ......

Page 3: ...en Doors 19 Ovens 19 Tall Oven 19 Cleaning Table 20 7 Troubleshooting 21 8 Installation 23 Dear Installer 23 Safety Requirements and Regulations 23 Provision of Ventilation 23 Location of Cooker 24 Co...

Page 4: ...ii...

Page 5: ...lease refer to the oven shelf installation in the Accessories section WARNING The appliance and its accessible parts become hot during use and will retain heat even after you have stopped cooking Care...

Page 6: ...ble clamp Minimum temperature rating T105 Read the instructions before installing or using this appliance Gas Connection Safety This cooker is a Class 2 Subclass 1 appliance This appliance can be conv...

Page 7: ...0 minutes with the grill pan in position pushed fully back and the grill door open Make sure the room is well ventilated to the outside air see Ventilation below People with respiratory or allergy pro...

Page 8: ...t when the oven door is opened Fig 1 3 When opening the oven stand well back and allow any steam to disperse DO NOT use hotplate protectors foil or hotplate covers of any description These may affect...

Page 9: ...necessary otherwise the control knobs may become very hot DO NOT use the timed oven if the adjoining oven is already warm DO NOT place warm food in the oven to be timed DO NOT use a timed oven that i...

Page 10: ...burner while another burner is on otherwise an electric shock could result Grill Glide out Grill Care n WARNING UNATTENDED COOKING UNDER THE GRILL CAN BE DANGEROUS AND MAY RESULT IN FIRE When using t...

Page 11: ...this is normal Do not attempt to disassemble or clean around any burner while another burner is on otherwise an electric shock could result To light a burner push in the selected burner control knob a...

Page 12: ...around the hotplate burners as soon as possible after spills occur Try to wipe them off while the enamel is still warm Note The use of aluminium pans may cause metallic marking of the pan supports Th...

Page 13: ...NING When the trivet has been removed from the grill pan please ensure that the grill pan and cradle are fully returned into the grill chamber The grill pan door MUST remain open n Accessible parts ma...

Page 14: ...wer half of the oven and hotter area to the top The exposed top element may cook some foods too quickly so we recommend that the food be positioned in the lower half of the oven to cook The oven tempe...

Page 15: ...ontrols a function selector and a temperature setting knob Fig 2 14 Turn the function selector control to a cooking function Fig 2 15 shows the control set for convectional oven cooking Turn the oven...

Page 16: ...front downward and locate into the front of the runners Lay the shelf flat Press on the rear of the shelf to secure in place To Remove a Shelf from the Telescopic Shelf Runners Slide the shelf out on...

Page 17: ...e Ladder Shelf Supports Lift the ladder support hooks out of the two locating holes in the oven side or divider before lifting the support clear of the bottom ladder restraint Refit by inserting the b...

Page 18: ...ch on both elements Fig 3 1 Fig 3 2 To switch on the right half element Fig 3 3 Fig 3 4 Fig 3 5 Cooking suggestions 1 Nearest to the element Toast streaky bacon 2 Middle high cheese on toast welsh rar...

Page 19: ...and 232mm 9 1 8 by 321mm 12 5 8 in the tall oven When the oven is on do not leave the door open for longer than necessary otherwise the knobs may get very hot Always leave a finger s width between dis...

Page 20: ...o size 20 40 minutes according to size 2 3 hours 45 60 minutes 40 45 minutes 2 to 3 hours 20 30 minutes 15 20 minutes 15 20 minutes per 500g Steaks according to thickness Conventional Oven Temperature...

Page 21: ...of fats or grease On Natural Gas the burners flames should be a bluish colour with at most a slight yellowish fringe On LP gas the flames may be softer The cooktop burner flames may have a slight yel...

Page 22: ...loves Wash the grill pan trivet and grill tray in hot soapy water Alternatively wash the grill pan in a dishwasher After grilling meats or any foods that soil leave to soak for a few minutes in the si...

Page 23: ...ls and wipe with a lint free cloth and hot soapy water The panels should then be dried and replaced and the oven heated at 200 C for about one hour This will make sure that the panels are working effe...

Page 24: ...Sides and plinth Painted surface Hot soapy water soft cloth Splashback rear grille Enamel or stainless steel Hot soapy water soft cloth Cream cleaner with care if necessary Control panel Paint enamel...

Page 25: ...track down your original installer Power failure In the event of a failure in the electrical supply remember to reset the clock to make sure that the timed oven continues to operate Food is cooking to...

Page 26: ...the cooker is in use then the cooling fan may have failed Should this occur please contact your installer a qualified repair engineer or Customer Service to arrange for its repair The knobs get hot wh...

Page 27: ...2 1 when the installation is in a permanent dwelling BS 5482 2 when the installation is in a caravan or other non permanent dwelling or BS 5482 3 when the installation is in a boat The Gas Safety Inst...

Page 28: ...essure over 75mbar in event of regulator failure After converting the appliance please attach the Gas Conversion sticker over the appropriate area of the data badge this will identify the gas type for...

Page 29: ...ommend a gap of 1000 mm between units to allow for moving the cooker Do not box the cooker in it must be possible to move the cooker in and out for cleaning and servicing A clearance of 90 mm is requi...

Page 30: ...he flue vent over the screws and slide down Fig 9 3 Tighten the screws to secure n Before fitting the side panels it is recommended that the required height of the cooker is set This will simplify the...

Page 31: ...atched to cooker Bottom Panel Plinth Front Mounting Brackets Q050877 Left hand Q050878 Right hand Screws supplied 2x Machine Screw 2x Self Tapping Screw Fitting the Side Panel Rear Retaining Brackets...

Page 32: ...Brackets 1 Loosen the two screws in the underside of the transit bracket Fig 9 6 2 Slide the bracket forwards and remove Discard the Transit Bracket Fitting the Obscuring Trims 1 Located near the fron...

Page 33: ...base connects to the rear retaining washer and the slotted tab at the top rear connects onto the screw in the flue vent Fig 9 10 4 Check everything is firmly connected and tighten the screw in the fl...

Page 34: ...Tilt the bottom of the panel slightly to locate the lower slots onto the washers Fig 9 11 Now rotate the panel to fit over the pins Fig 9 12 2 Using the two screws and allen key supplied loosely fit t...

Page 35: ...pace to get behind it n Do not use the door handles or control knobs to manoeuvre the cooker Final Checks Hotplate Check Check each burner in turn refer to the Hotplate Burners section at the front of...

Page 36: ...crewdriver 2 Flat head screwdriver 3 Allen keys provided in pack Removing the Bottom Panel Plinth 1 Open the left and right hand oven door 2 Unscrew the two allen head screws Fig 10 1 lift the bottom...

Page 37: ...away from the flue vent and the retaining washer Fig 10 4 3 Inside the top of the side panel top are two tabs Move the side panel up and away from the cooker Fig 10 5 4 Note If a side panel is loose f...

Page 38: ...reconnection check that the appliance is electrically safe Injectors Remove the pan supports and burner heads For each burner remove the large brass venturi on the top of the burner base Fig 11 1 Remo...

Page 39: ...Burner IMPORTANT If you are converting to LP Gas the large ring in the conversion kit MUST be fitted to the centre burner Fit the large ring if required Screw in the hexagon headed venturi but to mak...

Page 40: ...deally the hose supply connection should be within the shaded area A Fig 12 2 For Natural Gas the flexible hose must be in accordance with BS669 For LP Gas it should be capable of 50mbar pressure 70 C...

Page 41: ...erminals for your electrical supply type Fig 13 1 and Fig 13 2 Check that the links are correctly fitted and that the terminal screws are tight Secure the mains cable using the cable clamp Repositioni...

Page 42: ...lement A7 Left hand multi function oven fan B1 Grill control B2 Left hand grill element B3 Right hand grill element Code Description C1 Right hand fan oven control C2 Right hand fan oven thermostat C3...

Page 43: ...m Hotplate Ratings Hotplate Bypass Screw Natural Gas 20 mb L P Gas Injector Injector Large Burner 57 5 0 kW 165 5 0 kW 364g h 107 Medium Burner 40 3 0 kW 120 3 0 kW 218g h 82 Semi Rapide Small Burner...

Page 44: ...40 638 DEPTH EXCLUDING HANDLE 700 DEPTH INCLUDING HANDLE 638 DEPTH EXCLUDING HANDLE 700 DEPTH INCLUDING HANDLE 990...

Page 45: ...er Semi Rapide Medium Burner EE gas burner 60 8 Semi Rapide Medium Burner EE gas burner Rapide Large Burner EE gas burner 58 5 Rapide Large Burner EE gas burner 58 5 Rapide Large Burner EE gas burner...

Page 46: ...ight hand Efficiency Fuel type Electric Cavity type Fanned Power conventional Power forced air convection 2 5 Volume Litres 67 Energy consumption electricity conventional kWh cycle Energy consumption...

Page 47: ...43 NOTE...

Page 48: ...Clarence Street Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire CV31 2AD England Tel 44 0 1926 457628 E mail consumer mercuryappliances co uk...

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