Commercial plate dispensers store and deliver plates at the pass-line with controlled height and even spacing - reducing manual handling, improving service speed and protecting plate stacks from chipping. Hospitality Connect supplies plate dispensers from Cambro, Hupfer, Carlisle and Vogue - mobile, drop-in (incounter) and tabletop formats with heated and unheated options.
Types of plate dispenser
- Mobile heated plate dispensers: Hupfer twin-tube and single-tube units that pre-warm 60-80 plates ready for plating; sized to standard 180-330mm plates.
- Mobile unheated plate dispensers: Spring-loaded plate stack on castor wheels; for cold and ambient service. Cambro and Carlisle models.
- Drop-in (incounter) heated dispensers: Built into pass-line counter; flush-mount for fixed kitchen layouts.
- Drop-in unheated dispensers: Same flush-mount format without heating; for cold dishes and dessert plates.
- Tabletop dispensers: Compact bench-mount units for cafés and front-of-house service.
Sizing and configuration
Match dispenser tube range to plate diameter. Standard pizza plates run 280-330mm; entree plates 180-220mm; bread/dessert plates 150-180mm. Multi-tube dispensers (2 or 3 tubes side-by-side) handle multiple plate sizes from one footprint. Capacity: a 60-plate single-tube dispenser holds plates for 60 covers; a 2x60 twin-tube holds two plate sizes. Mobile vs incounter: mobile dispensers move with service flow but lose pass-line integration; incounter dispensers are fixed but cleaner integration for fine-dining pass.
Use cases
- Banquet plate-up: Heated dispensers pre-warm plates for batch-plating; reduces plate temperature loss during long banquet service.
- Hotel breakfast pass: High-volume heated dispensers with mobile cart for buffet replenishment.
- Fine-dining pass: Drop-in heated dispensers integrated into pass-line; aesthetic and functional.
- Aged care and hospital service: Heated mobile dispensers move plate-up to ward-level service.
- Café and casual dining: Tabletop dispensers organise plate stacks at the bench without pre-heating.
Operating notes: heated dispensers need 15-20 minutes pre-warm to reach plate-up temperature (around 65 degrees C). Don't overload tubes - spring-loaded mechanism wears under excessive plate weight; follow manufacturer's plate count rating. For multi-plate-size operations, use multi-tube dispensers rather than swapping plate sizes mid-service. Plate inventory: stock 1.5x service capacity in dispensers (in service + cleaning + dispenser refill). Heated dispensers run 10A 240V typically; confirm circuit before installation. Dispenser tube cleaning: monthly strip-down of springs and tube walls is HACCP-required. Specifier checklist: confirm plate range (single-size restaurants need single-tube; multi-course fine dining needs multi-tube); confirm whether mobile or incounter suits your service flow; coordinate dispenser placement with the cooking line and the pass so plates flow naturally from dispenser to plating to pickup.
Pair with
Combine with food and plate wamers, dinnerware and food heat lamps for full pass-line setups.