Built-In / Built-Under Ovens - What's the Difference?
Built-In / Built-Under Ovens - What's the Difference?
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Discussion

jap-car

Original Poster:

745 posts

276 months

Wednesday 15th February 2006
quotequote all
I need a new oven and hob in my fitted kitchen. I'm confused by the terminology. Please can someone explain the difference between "built-in" and "built-under". I'm thinking I need built-under as the oven will be going under my standard height work-top but I'm not certain. Do built-in and built-under perhaps have different fixings?

Thanks, Robert

simpo two

92,067 posts

291 months

Wednesday 15th February 2006
quotequote all
As I understand it, Built-in is a complete unit that fits into a gap between units; Built-under is a seperate oven and hob so the edge of the worktop runs across between them.

billynomates

2,101 posts

262 months

Wednesday 15th February 2006
quotequote all
simpo two said:
As I understand it, Built-in is a complete unit that fits into a gap between units; Built-under is a seperate oven and hob so the edge of the worktop runs across between them.


Whats slot in then? oh kitchen God

mak

1,444 posts

252 months

Wednesday 15th February 2006
quotequote all
wot a strange subject! intergrated, built in, under , integral ect, u need a new intergrated oven and seperate hob. be warned though all hobs are slightly diff size so your old cut out (work top) might be no good. A stand alone cooker fits into the gap left between units. all oven houseings are 600mm width so the oven is pretty much standard appart from the odd few that need a plinth to fit. God i'm talking about work on a car site, now thats just tooooo sad.

touchingcloth

11,706 posts

265 months

Wednesday 15th February 2006
quotequote all
I think built in is usually a single oven and often has a space for a drawer under the oven, hence it is built into the unit. A built under oven is usually slightly larger with 2 ovens or oven and grill (2 doors) and fills the oven whole housing unit down to the plinth.

Might be wrong on this though.

jap-car

Original Poster:

745 posts

276 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies. I think you guys are as confused as me! For anyone who might be interested, I just received the following information.

"Built in and built under are different, the built under sits directly on the floor and built in sits in a unit carcass."

touchingcloth

11,706 posts

265 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
How do you explain this then

Built under oven housing

I actually also now think, "built in" are so called because whilst they can go underneath a counter, they can also be eyelevel mounted in a tall unit. "built-under" is a unit designed to the same height a standard base unit and are solely designed to go under a counter, they fill the entire unit from the worktop down to the plinth but still go in a housing unit with legs but do not sit on the floor themselves.

scotal

8,751 posts

305 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
A built under sits under the work top, it has a separate hob, but otherwise looks like a normal oven. It will sit in a housing. Built in sits at eyelevel in a larger housing. Built under ovens are slightly shorter then built ins, the two are not mutually exchangable.
Taken from John Lewis Webby
www.johnlewis.com/Electrical/Cookers/Cookers/Built+in+Ovens/230220076/Product.aspx is built in
www.johnlewis.com/Electrical/Cookers/Cookers/Built+in+Ovens/230220077/Product.aspx is built under

Built under or in usually refers to double ovens.Single ovens can be either, as they are smaller than either

touchingcloth

11,706 posts

265 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
scotal said:
A built under sits under the work top, it has a separate hob, but otherwise looks like a normal oven. It will sit in a housing. Built in sits at eyelevel in a larger housing. Built under ovens are slightly shorter then built ins, the two are not mutually exchangable.
Taken from John Lewis Webby
www.johnlewis.com/Electrical/Cookers/Cookers/Built+in+Ovens/230220076/Product.aspx is built in
www.johnlewis.com/Electrical/Cookers/Cookers/Built+in+Ovens/230220077/Product.aspx is built under

Built under or in usually refers to double ovens.Single ovens can be either, as they are smaller than either


That makes sense but I still think you can call a single oven "built in", and this can go at either level. A double built in will not fit under as, as you say is larger still.

single built-in




B17NNS

18,506 posts

273 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
A built under over sits in an oven housing underneath a worktop (it is not a free standing oven/hob type combo).

A built in oven also sits in an oven housing but can be at any height for example in a tall hosuing.

jap-car

Original Poster:

745 posts

276 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
touchingcloth said:
How do you explain this then

Built under oven housing



I can't!

Again, thank you for all the replies. Strewth this is complex (and not very interesting). I think my current oven sits in an item like the B&Q link above. Do you reckon the top part of the double layered plinth is removable hence allowing for different sized ovens?

I was hoping to avoid pulling apart the oven housing prior to actually getting a new oven but I think I'm going to have to...

>> Edited by jap-car on Thursday 16th February 12:52

g_attrill

8,831 posts

272 months

Thursday 16th February 2006
quotequote all
mak said:
...A stand alone cooker fits into the gap left between units. all oven houseings are 600mm width so the oven is pretty much standard appart from the odd few that need a plinth to fit.....


Some are 550mm, although very few. My parents had a new kitchen fitted and had a 550mm gap left for their old Belling unit. They replaced it fairly soon afterwards and wished they had a 600mm gap made because approx 90% of ovens on sale are that size.

Gareth