95% Efficiency vs 40% Gas: 11 Insights on Induction Griddle Utility Savings
5 տարվա երաշխիք | 2 տարվա անվճար փոխանակում | 1 տարվա անվճար վերադարձ
Sa rehiyon ng modernong paghahain ng pagkain, lalo na para sa mga Chain Restaurant at Quick Service Restaurant (QSRs), ang margin para sa pagkakamali ay napakaliit. Sa loob ng maraming dekada, ang komersyal na kusina ay pinangungunahan ng ugong ng mga gas burner at ang matinding init ng mga tradisyonal na griddle. Ang mga makinang ito ay naging mga workhorse ng linya, nagse-sear ng mga steak, nagbi-flip ng mga burger, at nag-scramble ng mga itlog. Gayunpaman, isang tahimik, hindi nakikitang magnanakaw ang nagpapatakbo sa mga kusina sa buong mundo, na kumukuha ng mga tubo oras-oras: ang energy inefficiency. Ang debate sa pagitan ng commercial induction thermal efficiency at tradisyonal na gas heating ay hindi na lamang tungkol sa environmental sustainability—ito ay isang kritikal na pag-uusap tungkol sa pinansyal na kaligtasan at operational profitability.
Sa AT Cooker, gumugol kami ng mahigit 15 taon sa pagsusuri ng mga commercial kitchen pain points, na lumalampas sa simpleng pagmamanupaktura upang maunawaan ang pang-araw-araw na pakikibaka ng mga chef at may-ari. Nasaksihan namin mismo kung paano ang mga luma nang gas equipment ay nagbubuhos ng pera, hindi lamang sa pamamagitan ng mga gas line kundi pati na rin sa mga HVAC system na nahihirapang labanan ang malaking waste heat. Sa mabilis na pag-unlad ng induction griddle energy cost savings technology, ang landscape ay mabilis na nagbabago. Ngayon, malalim nating sinusuri ang matematika, ang pisika, at ang mahirap na pinansyal na katotohanan kung bakit ang pag-upgrade sa induction ang pinakamatalinong capital expenditure na maaari mong gawin ngayong fiscal year.
Industry Reality Check: Alam mo ba na ang isang standard gas griddle ay nag-aaksaya ng halos 60 cents sa bawat dolyar na ginagastos mo sa panggatong? Sa malaking kaibahan, induction commercial griddles ay nagpapanatili ng 95 cents ng halaga direkta sa proseso ng pagluluto, na ginagawang ang iyong utility bill mula sa isang liability patungo sa isang asset.
1. Ang Pangunahing Pisika: 95% Thermal Efficiency vs. 40% Gas Waste
Ang pinakamahalagang differentiator sa electric vs gas griddle efficiency comparison ay nakasalalay sa pangunahing paraan ng paglipat ng init. Ang mga tradisyonal na gas griddle ay gumagana sa isang nakakagulat na primitive na prinsipyo: nagsusunog ka ng panggatong upang painitin ang hangin, na siya namang nagpapainit sa isang mabigat na metal plate, na sa wakas ay naglilipat ng init sa pagkain. Ang multi-step na proseso na ito ay puno ng “energy leaks” sa bawat yugto.
Thermal Efficiency Comparison
Data Source: AT Cooker Labs & Industry Standards
Gas Griddles (The 40% Trap): Ayon sa mga pamantayan ng industriya at mga ulat mula sa mga katawan tulad ng Food Service Technology Center (FSTC), kahit na ang mga mahusay na naka-tune na gas griddle ay madalas na gumagana sa isang 40-50% efficiency lamang. Ang natitirang 50-60% ng enerhiya na binabayaran mo ay tumatakas sa mga gilid ng griddle plate bilang mainit na flue gas. Sa esensya ay nagbabayad ka para painitin ang iyong kusina, hindi ang iyong pagkain.
Induction Technology (The 95% Solution): Ang commercial induction thermal efficiency ay umaabot sa 90-95% dahil walang intermediate heating element. Ang electromagnetic field ay nagpapagana sa mga iron molecule sa loob mismo ng griddle plate. Ang plate ay nagiging ang pinagmumulan ng init. Walang heat loss sa nakapaligid na hangin sa panahon ng generation phase. Ang pagkakaiba na ito ay hindi lamang teoretikal. Para sa isang QSR na nagpapatakbo ng kagamitan ng 12 hanggang 16 na oras sa isang araw, ang efficiency gap na ito ay nagiging malaking operational variances. Kapag gumamit ka ng isang AT Cooker Induction Griddle, ginagamit mo ang direktang paglipat ng enerhiya, na tinitiyak na ang bawat kilowatt na binayaran ay isang kilowatt na ginamit para sa pagluluto.
2. Ang “Double Tax” ng Gas: Hidden HVAC Loads
Isa sa mga pinaka-hindi napapansin na aspeto ng induction griddle energy cost analysis is what we call the “Double Tax.” When you run a 30,000 BTU gas griddle, roughly 18,000 BTUs are dumped directly into your kitchen environment as waste heat. In a busy commercial kitchen, this raises the ambient temperature significantly, creating a harsh environment for chefs and stressing other equipment.
This leads to the second tax: your HVAC system. Your air conditioning must work overtime to remove that 18,000 BTUs of waste heat. So, you pay the gas company to generate the heat, and then you pay the electric company to remove it. It is a financial hemorrhage that most restaurant owners accept as “the cost of doing business.” It doesn’t have to be.
อุปกรณ์ครัวเชิงพาณิชย์ - จาก AT Cooker
- ในฐานะผู้ผลิตแบรนด์อุปกรณ์ทำอาหารแบบเหนี่ยวนำเชิงพาณิชย์ระดับมืออาชีพ AT Cooker ได้ตอบสนองความต้องการของร้านอาหารและโรงแรม และวิจัยอุปกรณ์ทำอาหารเชิงพาณิชย์ตามมาตรฐานโดยใช้เทคโนโลยีการเหนี่ยวนำล่าสุด.
- อุปกรณ์ทำอาหารเชิงพาณิชย์คุณภาพระดับเชิงพาณิชย์ที่ไร้รอยต่อเหล่านี้เปิดโอกาสให้เราได้รวมอุปกรณ์ที่เราเลือกเข้ากับอุปกรณ์ทำอาหารอเนกประสงค์ที่ไร้รอยต่อ สร้างครัวเชิงพาณิชย์ที่มีประสิทธิภาพ ต้นทุนต่ำ ปลอดภัย เป็นมิตรต่อสิ่งแวดล้อม และยั่งยืน เรามีอุปกรณ์มาตรฐานที่สามารถให้บริการครัวเชิงพาณิชย์ได้หลายแห่ง.
- AT Cooker ให้บริการอย่างมืออาชีพเสมอ ตั้งแต่วัสดุ การออกแบบ ไปจนถึงการผลิต เรามุ่งเน้นที่คุณภาพ ประสิทธิภาพ และความน่าเชื่อถือ เพื่อให้มั่นใจว่าโซลูชันที่ดีที่สุดจะถูกส่งมอบให้กับลูกค้าของเราทุกคน คุณมีครัวเชิงพาณิชย์หรือไม่? เราจะเป็นหนึ่งในพันธมิตรที่ดีที่สุดของคุณ.
Work Voltage
| Single-Phase | Three-Phase |
|---|---|
| 120V, 220V | 208V/ 240V, 380V, 480V |
Global In-Stock + Fast Pickup
| US | UK | Germany | France |
|---|---|---|---|
| իտալիա | Իսպանիա | Բելգիա | Բուլղարիա |
3. Break-Even Analysis: ROI in 12-18 Months
Many restaurant owners hesitate at the initial price tag of induction equipment. It is true: premium induction griddles often command a higher upfront cost than standard gas counterparts. However, viewing this through CapEx (Capital Expenditure) alone is a strategic error. You must look at OpEx (Operational Expenditure). The initial investment in AT Cooker technology is recouped rapidly through daily savings.
Based on our extensive market data and feedback from over 500 QSR clients, the average establishment switching from gas to commercial induction thermal efficiency systems sees a break-even point in just 12 to 18 months. This ROI is achieved solely through monthly utility bill reductions. After this period, the savings become pure profit, contributing directly to your bottom line. For a machine designed to last 8-10 years, that represents nearly a decade of higher profit margins.
Zero idle consumption plays a massive role here. A gas griddle with a standing pilot light burns gas 24/7 unless manually shut off. That pilot light alone can cost hundreds of dollars annually per unit. With induction, when you remove the pan or turn off the zone, energy consumption drops to near zero instantly. There is no “idling” cost.
5 տարվա երաշխիք | 2 տարվա անվճար փոխանակում | 1 տարվա անվճար վերադարձ
4. The Myth of Power: Why 5kW Induction Beats 30,000 BTU Gas
A common misconception we hear from chefs is, “Gas has more power.” They see “30,000 BTU” on a spec sheet and compare it to “5kW” (approx. 17,000 BTU) and assume gas is stronger. This is a fundamental flaw in understanding effective power delivery in a commercial environment.
Because gas is only 40% efficient, a 30,000 BTU burner only delivers about 12,000 BTUs of actual heat to the cooking surface. In contrast, a 5kW induction coil, operating at 95% efficiency, delivers roughly 16,150 BTUs directly to the food. In real-world tests, a 5kW commercial induction griddle heats up faster, recovers temperature quicker, and sears more consistently than its gas rival. It is not about how much energy you burn; it is about how much energy actually reaches the steak.
5. Operational Advantages: Speed, Recovery, and Precision
Beyond the utility bills, the functional advantages of induction griddle energy cost savings extend deeply into food quality and speed of service—metrics that define customer satisfaction.
- Instant Recovery Technology: When a chef throws ten frozen patties onto a gas griddle, the plate temperature plummets. It takes significant time for the gas burners to drive heat back through the heavy metal plate. AT Cooker’s induction sensors detect this drop instantly and dump full power into the zone, recovering temperature in seconds, not minutes. This ensures consistent searing and food safety, even during the lunch rush.
- Precise Zone Control: Standard gas manifolds typically heat the entire plate or large, imprecise sections. Induction coils allow for laser-focused zone control. You can have one zone searing at 400°F and the adjacent zone keeping buns warm at 150°F, without heat bleeding between them. This level of control is simply impossible with standard gas setups.
- Ambient Temperature Benefits: As mentioned, less waste heat means a cooler kitchen. This has a secondary benefit: your refrigeration units (prep tables, walk-ins) don’t have to work as hard to maintain their temperatures. This extends the lifespan of your compressors and lowers electricity draw across the entire kitchen ecosystem.
6. Durability and The “Hidden” Engineering Quality
Why do some induction units last 10 years and others fail in 6 months? The secret lies in the components you can’t see. AT Cooker prioritizes internal build quality over flashy exteriors.
Sealed Induction Coils
One of the biggest maintenance headaches with gas is clogged nozzles. Grease, dust, and carbon buildup require frequent cleaning and calibration. AT Cooker uses fully sealed induction coils. These components are impervious to grease splashes and flour dust. They maintain their 95% efficiency for their entire lifespan because there are no physical nozzles to clog, ensuring consistent performance year after year.
The IGBT Factor (Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor)
This is the brain of the induction unit. Many manufacturers cut costs here, using cheap generic transistors. At AT Cooker, we utilize premium German IGBTs (often from Infineon). While these cost 35% more than standard components, they reduce electronic failure rates by over 80%. In a busy commercial kitchen, reliability is not a luxury; it is a necessity.
“Manufacturing costs rise 8-12% for every real 1kW increase in commercial power output. Be wary of cheap units claiming high power; often, they are overdriving weak components that will fail under load.” – AT Cooker Engineering Team
1. 7. AT Cooker-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ-r-iŋ-ɛ-tɛ-si-kɔ-tʃɛ
We don’t just sell equipment; we partner with your business. We understand that adopting new technology feels risky. That is why we have structured our service to eliminate that risk entirely. Our commitment goes far beyond the sale.
| 5-Year Warranty | We stand behind our induction commercial griddles for half a decade. Most competitors offer 1 year. We know our build quality can endure the harshest kitchen environments. |
| 2-වසර නොමිලේ හුවමාරුව | If a unit fails due to a manufacturing defect within the first two years, we don’t just repair it; we exchange it. No downtime, no arguments. |
| 1-Year Free Return | Not satisfied? We offer a 1-year free return policy. We are that confident in our performance and the value we bring to your kitchen. |
| Global Stock | Need it now? We have stock in the US, UK, Germany, France, Belgium, Italy, Spain, and Bulgaria. No waiting for ocean freight. Get your equipment installed and running in days, not months. |
5 տարվա երաշխիք | 2 տարվա անվճար փոխանակում | 1 տարվա անվճար վերադարձ
8. AT Cooker’s Final Verdict
The transition from gas to induction is not a trend; it is the inevitable future of commercial kitchens. With commercial induction thermal efficiency reaching 95%, the savings on utility bills, HVAC loads, and maintenance make the ROI undeniable. When you factor in the speed, precision, and cooler working environment, the choice becomes clear.
Whether you are retrofitting an existing line or building a new concept, we recommend analyzing your current utility spend. You will likely find that the “cheaper” gas griddle is actually the most expensive piece of equipment you own in the long run. Trust in AT Cooker’s 15 years of experience to guide you toward a more profitable, efficient, and modern kitchen.
For more detailed data on energy savings, you can refer to reports from Energy Star Commercial Griddles or research from the Food Service Technology Center. For our Chinese market insights, check the latest data on China Household Electrical Appliances Association regarding induction standards.

