Pizza Oven Repair

Pizza Oven Repair in Dallas

Specialized pizza oven repair for deck ovens, conveyor ovens, and wood-fired ovens. Connect with 399+ verified kitchen equipment technicians in Dallas for expert pizza oven repair.

About Pizza Oven Repair

Pizza ovens operate at extreme temperatures and require specialized knowledge for proper repair and calibration. Our technicians are experienced with all types of commercial pizza ovens including gas and electric deck ovens, conveyor pizza ovens, wood-fired ovens, and high-temperature stone ovens from brands like Bakers Pride, Middleby Marshall, Lincoln, and Blodgett. Temperature consistency is everything in pizza operations — even a 25°F variance can affect product quality and cooking times. Our technicians calibrate ovens precisely after every repair and can also adjust temperature profiles for different menu items.

Benefits of Professional Pizza Oven Repair

Restores precise temperature control
Expert calibration for perfect results
All pizza oven types serviced
Minimizes downtime during peak hours
Stone and deck replacement available
Conveyor belt and drive system expertise

Common Pizza Oven Repair Issues We Solve

1
Temperature inconsistency or drift
2
Burner ignition failures
3
Conveyor belt or drive motor issues
4
Deck stone cracking
5
Control board failures
6
Dome thermocouple failures
7
Gas valve problems

Our Pizza Oven Repair Process

1

Temperature profile testing

2

Ignition and gas system inspection

3

Mechanical and electrical diagnosis

4

Repair estimate

5

Component repair or replacement

6

Temperature calibration

7

Production testing

When to Call for Pizza Oven Repair

  • Oven not reaching operating temperature
  • Inconsistent bake times or results
  • Conveyor belt problems
  • Ignition failures
  • Unusual smells or error codes

Pizza Oven Repair FAQs

What temperature must commercial dishwashers reach for sanitization?
High-temperature commercial dishwashers must reach 180°F (82°C) at the final rinse to achieve proper sanitization per NSF and health department standards. Low-temperature chemical sanitizing machines must maintain proper chemical concentrations (chlorine, iodine, or quaternary). If your high-temp machine isn't reaching 180°F, it's not properly sanitizing and may fail health inspection. Call a technician immediately.
What should I do if my walk-in is failing and I need to protect food?
1) Call an emergency refrigeration technician immediately. 2) Take and document temperature readings. 3) Move the most temperature-sensitive items (proteins, dairy) to alternate refrigeration first. 4) Contact your health department if temperatures approach 40°F+ — they can advise on food safety decisions. 5) Document all food temps for insurance claims. 6) Consider dry ice or portable refrigeration units for critical inventory. 7) Alert your supplier you may need emergency replacement products.