ᐅ Ceramic cooktop LAGAN and oven LAGAN. Does anyone have experience with these?
Created on: 14 Mar 2013 19:40
F
Fragenheini
Hello,
we are interested in the LAGAN oven and the LAGAN or BARMHÄRTIG ceramic cooktop.
Has anyone had any experience with these and can share some insights?
How easy is it to use?
Does it beep if you move a hot pot from a hot burner to a neighboring cold burner?
Is it possible to accidentally press buttons by objects like pot holders, pots, or trays?
Can the child lock be accidentally deactivated by a wet pot holder lying on top?
Does the oven smell strongly of solvents or similar for a long time? (My brother said there is an Ikea oven in the daycare center that still smells unhealthy after a long time).
THANK YOU very much in advance!!!!!!!!!!
we are interested in the LAGAN oven and the LAGAN or BARMHÄRTIG ceramic cooktop.
Has anyone had any experience with these and can share some insights?
How easy is it to use?
Does it beep if you move a hot pot from a hot burner to a neighboring cold burner?
Is it possible to accidentally press buttons by objects like pot holders, pots, or trays?
Can the child lock be accidentally deactivated by a wet pot holder lying on top?
Does the oven smell strongly of solvents or similar for a long time? (My brother said there is an Ikea oven in the daycare center that still smells unhealthy after a long time).
THANK YOU very much in advance!!!!!!!!!!
Z
zetterberg18 Mar 2013 17:35A ceramic glass cooktop doesn’t have pot detection since it’s just glass-ceramic.
Only induction cooktops have pot detection because without a counter-pole, nothing works anyway.
There was once a manufacturer who tried to implement something like pot detection for ceramic glass cooktops, but they didn’t succeed. Only Siemens has/had cooktops that prevented boil-overs, using thermal sensors and working only with their own system cookware, which was quite expensive...
Only induction cooktops have pot detection because without a counter-pole, nothing works anyway.
There was once a manufacturer who tried to implement something like pot detection for ceramic glass cooktops, but they didn’t succeed. Only Siemens has/had cooktops that prevented boil-overs, using thermal sensors and working only with their own system cookware, which was quite expensive...
N
Nayla_106818 Mar 2013 18:20Mercifully, glass-ceramic cooktops don’t have pot detection—they’re just glass-ceramic.
Pot detection is only found on induction cooktops because nothing works without a matching magnetic pot.
There was a manufacturer who tried to develop some kind of pot detection for glass-ceramic, but they couldn’t make it work. Only Siemens has or had cooktops that prevented boil-overs; they used thermal sensors and worked only with Siemens’ own system pots—quite expensive...Okay, second attempt,
Excerpt from the website:
"Boil-over protection: The cooktop automatically switches off if something boils over and moisture reaches the control panel."
There is also a pressure detection on the cooktop when something is placed or rests on it, which signals this with a beep.
Z
zetterberg19 Mar 2013 07:34
The boil-over protection works the same way as with all manufacturers that use TouchControl: when multiple sensors are activated simultaneously, the electronics perform a plausibility check -> control unit says "Commands received" -> electronics replies "That doesn’t make sense" -> electronics responds "I’m not going to process nonsense" -> result: "shutdown" Pressure detection? You do know what glass-ceramic is, right? It has nothing to do with "pressing"; it only works with sensors, as explained above.
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Nayla_106819 Mar 2013 13:13That's correct,
I stand corrected, "pressure" was definitely the wrong term.
If only you were as precise in other areas...
The original poster's question has clearly been answered; technical nitpicking and over-analyses are out of place here.
Regards
Nayla
I stand corrected, "pressure" was definitely the wrong term.
If only you were as precise in other areas...
The original poster's question has clearly been answered; technical nitpicking and over-analyses are out of place here.
Regards
Nayla
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