Types and ice formats
Ice machine selection turns on three things: how much ice per day, what format, and where the unit sits. Hospitality Connect stocks Scotsman, Brema, Polar, Blizzard, Skope, and Bonvue across these formats. Each format has clear use cases — the wrong type doesn't just look unprofessional, it costs money in melt loss and customer complaints. Brands also vary in service availability across Australia, so the right choice depends as much on regional support as on capacity.
- Cube ice (full and half): standard for bars and beverages; 13 g cubes from Brema, gourmet 22 g from Scotsman ECM and ECS series for spirit service.
- Nugget/chewable: soft pellet ice popular for soft-serve drinks, healthcare, and high-volume QSR with refillable cups.
- Flake ice: for seafood displays, salad bars, and medical use — packs around chilled product without crushing or denting.
- Bullet/tube: hollow cylinder; clear, slow-melting, fits drink dispensers efficiently and reduces dilution in spirits.
- Dice and gourmet: crystal-clear premium cubes for spirits and presentation work, typically Scotsman or Brema.
Sizing for your venue
Plan on roughly 1 kg ice per cover per service for venues serving cocktails, double that for high-volume bars and outdoor venues in summer. The Scotsman 23–31 kg/day self-contained units suit small cafés; Polar 20–50 kg/day countertop machines fit secondary stations; Blizzard SN-80 to SN-120 (80–120 kg/day) handle full restaurant service. For high-volume venues, modular cubers paired with NB-series ice storage bins (129–243 kg capacity) decouple production from storage and let machines run at off-peak times to manage demand peaks. A 30% safety margin on calculated demand is standard practice — the cost of running short on a Saturday night dwarfs the small uplift in capital outlay.
Operating considerations
- Air vs water cooled: air-cooled is cheaper but raises ambient kitchen temperature; water-cooled needs supply and drain plumbing but runs cooler in tight spaces.
- Ambient temperature: most machines drop output 20–30% above 32°C ambient — factor for non-air-conditioned bar zones and Queensland summer service.
- Drainage: gravity drain is standard; pump kits available for installations below floor level or where slope is impractical.
- Filtration: inline carbon filters extend element life and produce clearer ice — non-negotiable for hard-water areas.
- Sanitiser cycles: every machine on the HC range supports a manufacturer cleaner cycle; build it into the monthly compliance roster.
Pair with
Fitout an ice room with commercial fridges, merchandising refrigeration, and commercial food display, plus Scotsman cleaner and sanitiser kits to keep machines compliant. For glass-side service, pair with glass wash racks and dolleys for clean handover from wash to ice station.