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Unifrost Commercial refrigeration knowledge hub for Irish businesses
FAQ

How does the GN layout affect freezer airflow and temperature?

FAQ
Quick answer

GN layout matters because an upright freezer relies on unobstructed air movement to pull product down evenly to temperature and to recover quickly after door openings.

Support note

This FAQ is designed for a fast answer first. Use the related guide links if you need the fuller decision path behind the short version.

GN layout matters because an upright freezer relies on unobstructed air movement to pull product down evenly to temperature and to recover quickly after door openings.

Avoid “sealing” the air path. Deep pans pushed hard against the back, foil overhangs, and tightly stacked lids can create a solid wall that slows circulation and causes warm spots.

Leave consistent gaps. Build layouts with small, repeatable clearances around pans and baskets, especially at the back and on the sides, so cold air can return freely.

Don’t overload the door area. High-turnover items in the door zone can be convenient, but heavy loading there can increase temperature swings during service.

Use shallow pans for fast picks. Shallower GN pans (or baskets with airflow) generally recover faster after opening than tightly packed deep pans.

If you notice ice build-up in one area, slow pull-down after loading, or frequent alarms during service, the first check is usually layout and load density rather than the setpoint.

Read the full guide: Optimizing GN Basket Plans for Unifrost F410SS Upright Freezer in Hotel Banqueting.

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