For the last 5 years, my family has been in charge of the doughnut booth at our parish festival. Another couple established it and we took it over when they moved to another part of town. It's a pretty popular booth with folks willing to wait over 90 minutes to get a bag of doughnuts on Friday and Saturday nights, but it is a ton of work. We currently have a pair of mostly-manual Lil Orbits machines that run on 110v and lots of elbow grease. If I have 8-10 people to man the booth and the weather conditions are just right, and I have two people that are really good on the fryers, I can burst to about 500 doughnuts an hour, but my average sustainable rate is about 350. This means that I need to get there about 6 hours before the festival opens to start frying so that I can start the festival with around 2,000 doughnuts. Invariably, by 2030 I am completely out of doughnuts and I spend the rest of the night in the hole (so to speak) where I am selling them about 3x faster than I can make them. Usually around 2300-2315 I have to cut off sales and we spend the remainder of the evening trying to finish all the orders in the queue before the festival closes at midnight. In addition to actively sending people away, I have to tell folks that they're limited to a single dozen and I have plenty of people that balk the queue rather than wait 15-90 minutes.
That's my problem... here's my solution: We finally talking the steering committee into replacing the manual machines with something more automated. I'm looking at a couple different solutions, but this is a world I don't know much about. There are three goals that I need to achieve with the new system: First, I need to be able to reduce the amount of labor required to make the booth go. There are 4 official shifts during the festival, so that means currently have to get 40 people to volunteer in order to have my 10 people - 2 fryers, 1 order taker, 3 order fillers, 1 batter maker, 1 batter deliverer/supplies runner, 1 fryer attendant, and someone to oversee the whole operation. I'd like to drop that so that I can have 3-4 people in the booth selling and prepping doughnuts, one person making the batter, and then I can deliver the batter, get supplies, and tend to the fryer. The second goal is to be able to create enough doughnuts that I don't have to turn people away either directly or because there's a super-long wait. Finally, I want a more consistent product - with manual fryers, they get cooked to different levels of done-ness each time and the oil temp varies wildly because the heating elements are only 110v.
So here's where I'm out of my element: I can call up Lil Orbits and have them send me a brand-new SS2400 which should be able to do about 560/hour. The other option seems to be to get a used Belshaw Adamatic Mark II Donut Robot with a mini-doughnut hopper which should be able to do about 950/hour. What I don't like about Lil Orbits is the way they're trying to keep you hostage to buying their stuff and they actively sabotage the used market for their machines. They've got this whole screed on their webpage talking about how people call them "all the time" just to find out that the used machine they bought is going to require thousands of dollars of parts to get working again. They will give you a lifetime warranty but only to the original purchaser and only if you use their mix exclusively, Magnusson-Moss be damned! That said, our manual fryers from Lil Orbits have clocked almost 76,000 doughnuts between the two of them and haven't needed any repairs, although the welds in the fryer tanks are looking a little grody.
On the other hand, Belshaw makes commercial baking equipment. Apparently if you want to open up a bakery and make 40,000 doughnuts an hour, you order up a room-sized system from their catalog and get to it. My assumption is that, being a commercial bakery equipment manufacturer, these are machines that are designed with a very long life expectancy and with repair in mind. There's a local company that is listed as an authorized servicer which leads me to believe that parts availability isn't going to be a problem, although parts do seem pricey. At least they're upfront about it, though.
Yes, I know that there are doughnut machines on ebay and amazon for about a grand. Not interested. Full stop. I will be dragged out of my booth, tarred, feathered, and then drawn and quartered if my machine breaks down during the festival and I can't make any more doughnuts.
Anybody have any experience/knowledge about either the Lil Orbits or Belshaw Adamatic machines? Are there any other commercial-grade machines that I should be looking at? Anybody got one they're looking to unload for a good price!?