Ritter fortis1 User Manual

Food slicer fortis
Item No. / GTIN 516.000 / 40 04822 51600 4
1
Details
- metal construction
- silver metallic
- slice thickness adjustable up to approx. 20 mm
- safety switch for intermittent and continuous operation
- detachable carriage
- carriage way approx. 18 cm
- food collecting tray
- cable storage
- warranty: 2 years, product made in Germany
Technical features
- 230 V, 65 Watt eco-motor, duty cycle 5 minutes
- VDE/GS approval, safety category 2, CE
- dimensions: width 19,0 cm height 21,5 cm depth 33,5 cm
- weight 2,9 kg
Food slicer fortis1 - Test winner with all-round attributes
The fortis1, the metal food slicer, which was awarded a final mark of 1.4 in the Haus & Garten Test (5/2015), and has been crowned the test winner. Its excellent cutting results, its high quality finish and its low motor noise were found to be especially impressive.
Regardless of what you want to slice – bread, sausage, cheese, fruit or vegetables – everything shall be cut off evenly and appetizingly into wafer-thin or up to approx. 20 mm thick slices. The slicer is equipped with a switch for intermittent and continuous operation, a food collecting tray and cable storage.
Food slicer fortis1 is driven by a 65 W eco motor, at 20% reduced power consumption but 50% increased engine efficiency compared to the previous model.
A smooth ham- and sausage blade is available for every ritter slicer.
Awards
Technical data are subject to change
About ritterwerk:
ritterwerk was founded in 1905 by Franz Ritter. Since then the medium-sized company develops and produces household appliances which facilitate the everyday work in the kitchen. The medium-sized company, headed by Michael Schüller, develops, designs and produces exclusively in Gröbenzell near Munich. The company‘s philosophy ‚made in Germany‘ not only stands for its production site in Germany. It also incorporates high quality standards, sustainability, appropriate materials as well as functional design, thus clearly following the ‘Bauhaus’ principles of the twenties.
More information at: www.ritterwerk.com
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