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Cleaning
What?
How often?
Using what?
inside of stove
at least 1 x per year
hand brush, vacuum cleaner
connection piece
at least 1 x per year
hand brush, vacuum cleaner
glass panel
as required
when cold
using glass cleaner for stoves- and oven glasses
painted surfaces
as required
when cold
with a slightly damp microfibre cloth
Cleaning the swirl combustion chamber
You need to remove the swirl combustion chamber before you can clean it. The work steps described below (Fig.7 to Fig.9)
are performed inside the combustion chamber with the combustion chamber door open (see Fig.5). For clearer representa-
tion, the upper part of the combustion chamber is shown in a sectional view (see Fig.6).
Attention:
The swirl combustion chamber is made up of 2 sections. When removing the combustion chamber, make sure to
hold both sections together as they lie loosely on top of each other.
3 2 1 3
Fig.5 View into the combustion chamber from the bottom
1 Swirl combustion chamber
2 Baffle plate
3 Locking pin
2 1
Fig.6 Sectional view of the combustion chamber