I've a De Dietrich double-oven with Pyrolysis Cleaning in both ovens.
"Pyro Max" takes the oven up to over 500ºC (932ºF) and holds it there for 2 hours.
You've options to reduce that time to 1:45 or 1:30.
However, the default setting leaves nothing but a light coating of white dust.
Total power consumption is 7kW on a 230V supply.
Comes with loads of cooking modes though:
Circulating heat (Fan oven with the elements at the back on only) - Recommended for meats especially fish, chicken etc.
Combined heat (Cooking controlled by the upper and lower heating elements and by the fan.
Three combined sources of heat : a lot of heat from the bottom, a little circulating heat and a touch from the grill for browning.) - Great for pies and pastries and anything in an earthenware dish.
ECO - Not entirely sure who that works but it uses the upper and lower elements with the fan and it hits the oven's eco-label A++ rating.
Pulsed Grill + Rotisserie:
Spit roasting and regular roasting.
Fan pulses on and off as part of the cycle too.
It then has variable grill settings she you can run it with the rotisserie (spit) or without and set the grill in either compartment to whatever setting you like. from 1 to 5
Keep warm : runs a very cool fan oven with only heat from the back.
Defrosting - runs at 30ºC (delicate food), 40ºC or 50ºC (meats) and monitors temp accurately
Bread : You place a ramekin of water in the oven with this cycle to aid crust formation without burning it.
Not entirely sure what combination of elements is used but it works very well.
To cool itself, the oven has two sets of fans that blow air constantly outwards across the top of the top oven (smaller cavity) between the control panel and the oven and another one between the ovens.
These run at variable speeds depending on what the temperature is and force air down through the door too.
The result is that the exterior of the oven is only 25ºC when cooking and 40ºC when self-cleaning.
At max speed, the fans produce a pretty serious airflow.
The top one blows out straight through a slot above the door between the control panel and the door. So, any hot air rising gets blasted away and it's also cooling the oven internally.
"Pyro Max" takes the oven up to over 500ºC (932ºF) and holds it there for 2 hours.
You've options to reduce that time to 1:45 or 1:30.
However, the default setting leaves nothing but a light coating of white dust.
Total power consumption is 7kW on a 230V supply.
Comes with loads of cooking modes though:
Circulating heat (Fan oven with the elements at the back on only) - Recommended for meats especially fish, chicken etc.
Combined heat (Cooking controlled by the upper and lower heating elements and by the fan.
Three combined sources of heat : a lot of heat from the bottom, a little circulating heat and a touch from the grill for browning.) - Great for pies and pastries and anything in an earthenware dish.
ECO - Not entirely sure who that works but it uses the upper and lower elements with the fan and it hits the oven's eco-label A++ rating.
Pulsed Grill + Rotisserie:
Spit roasting and regular roasting.
Fan pulses on and off as part of the cycle too.
It then has variable grill settings she you can run it with the rotisserie (spit) or without and set the grill in either compartment to whatever setting you like. from 1 to 5
Keep warm : runs a very cool fan oven with only heat from the back.
Defrosting - runs at 30ºC (delicate food), 40ºC or 50ºC (meats) and monitors temp accurately
Bread : You place a ramekin of water in the oven with this cycle to aid crust formation without burning it.
Not entirely sure what combination of elements is used but it works very well.
To cool itself, the oven has two sets of fans that blow air constantly outwards across the top of the top oven (smaller cavity) between the control panel and the oven and another one between the ovens.
These run at variable speeds depending on what the temperature is and force air down through the door too.
The result is that the exterior of the oven is only 25ºC when cooking and 40ºC when self-cleaning.
At max speed, the fans produce a pretty serious airflow.
The top one blows out straight through a slot above the door between the control panel and the door. So, any hot air rising gets blasted away and it's also cooling the oven internally.