The most important dimensions, side by side.
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The food-contact surfaces are stainless steel — uncoated, no PTFE, no ceramic nonstick. The grade isn't disclosed, so you can't independently verify corrosion resistance if you're cooking acidic foods frequently. Contact Our Place to confirm 304 (18/8) — if it is, this is one of the safest container materials available.
The basket uses a ceramic nonstick coating that Typhur claims is PFAS-free — but no independent lab has verified this. Without an ICP-MS test, you can't confirm the full coating chemistry. Use non-metal utensils to avoid degrading the surface.
The crisper plate is chrome-plated steel, which is food-safe at cooking temperatures. Modern chrome plating uses trivalent chromium — the safe form — but Our Place doesn't confirm this explicitly. Hand wash promptly and inspect weld points periodically for rust if the plating wears.
The crisper plate has a ceramic nonstick coating, which doesn't contain PTFE or PFOA per the brand's claim. No independent lab has tested the specific formulation, so the full chemistry isn't confirmed. Treat it gently — non-metal utensils only, and hand washing will extend the life of the coating.
Our Place declares AB 1200 compliance, which legally prohibits the most acutely hazardous PFAS and heavy metals from food-contact materials. This is a brand self-declaration, not an independent lab result. Compliance also doesn't mean PFAS-free across the board — only the compounds named in the regulation.
The Typhur Sync carries FCC certification, which covers electrical and radio frequency safety — not the food-contact coating. There's no SGS, Mamavation, or ICP-MS lab testing on the nonstick surfaces. If independent coating verification matters to you, this isn't the fryer.
At 53.6 watts per quart, this oven doesn't generate enough heat density to crisp dense proteins — think chicken thighs or pork chops — at full load. It handles reheating, toast, and lighter air frying well. If your household air fries frequently and in volume, this is a real limitation.
At 218.75 watts per quart, you'll get solid results on wings, fries, and smaller cuts. Larger proteins like a whole chicken breast or thick pork chop will cook more like a convection oven — still good, just not the sharp crispness you'd get from a higher-powered unit.
The 450°F ceiling covers every common cooking task: air frying, roasting, broiling, and high-heat finishing. You won't hit a temperature wall mid-recipe. Just know that at max temp, food can go from perfect to overdone in under two minutes — stay close.
The 450°F ceiling covers everything: frying, roasting, and high-heat crisping. You won't hit a wall with any standard recipe. Just know that at max temp, food can go from perfect to overdone in under 90 seconds.
At 31.7 quarts, this oven fits a 12-inch pizza or a full rotisserie chicken — confirmed by Our Place. The interior dimensions aren't officially published, so the listed capacity is the best available size reference. For families cooking in batches, plan for about 20 extra minutes per meal while the second batch catches up.
The basket fits 4–6 chicken thighs in a single layer, which means a full family meal in one batch — no waiting, no second round. The tradeoff is the footprint: expect 13–15 inches of counter width.
Nothing goes in the dishwasher — not the basket, rack, or any accessory. Over a year of regular use, that adds up to 10-15 hours of hand washing. Perforated parchment sheets (rated to 450°F) or silicone liners cut cleanup to a quick wipe and make this oven significantly more livable day-to-day.
Every food-contact part is dishwasher-safe — basket, crisper plate, all of it. After dinner, load the rack and you're done. That alone makes a real difference if you're running this thing daily.
At 58 decibels, you'll hear it running but it won't interrupt a conversation across the room. It's comparable to a quiet dishwasher. In a studio or open-plan apartment with a bedroom nearby, it may be noticeable during early mornings or late nights.
At 55 dB, the Sync runs noticeably quieter than most basket air fryers, which typically land in the 60–65 dB range. You can hold a conversation or watch TV at normal volume while it's running. It's not silent, but it won't take over the room.
One year covers manufacturing defects under normal use — that's the US standard for countertop appliances. It won't cover fan wear or degradation from heavy use over time. If you pay with an Amex or Visa Signature card, you typically get an automatic second year of coverage at no cost.
You get a standard 1-year manufacturer warranty, which covers defects but not coating wear or fan degradation from regular use. If you pay with an Amex or Visa Signature card, most automatically extend that to 2 years — worth doing at this price point.
Everything you need to make the call — who each one is for, and who should skip it.
Go for it if you...
You want a countertop oven with zero nonstick coating on any food-contact surface — the racks, basket, and interior are all bare stainless.
You need a true multi-mode oven that toasts, bakes, broils, air fries, and dehydrates without buying separate appliances.
Your family meals require real capacity — it holds a 12-inch pizza or a full rotisserie chicken across three rack positions.
You're replacing a coated toaster oven and hand-washing the accessories is an acceptable trade-off for uncoated surfaces.
You regularly cook for 3–5 people and need a 10.3-inch square basket that fits a full dinner without batching.
You're sensitive to kitchen noise — the Sync runs noticeably quieter than most basket air fryers.
You want every removable part to go in the dishwasher, including the basket and tray.
You're fine with brand-claimed ceramic nonstick and don't require third-party lab certification.
The main thing to know
Every food-contact surface is bare stainless steel — no PTFE, no ceramic, no off-gassing risk at any temperature — but the air fry mode is underpowered at 53.6 watts per quart, and nothing in the box is dishwasher safe.
The Sync's ceramic nonstick coating is brand-claimed PFAS-free — Typhur hasn't published independent lab verification, so you're taking their word on safety.
Skip this if you...
You need crispy results on dense proteins like chicken thighs — 53.6 W/qt can't sustain crisping temperature under a full load.
You expect dishwasher-safe accessories — the crumb tray, racks, and basket all require hand washing every time.
You want independently lab-tested PFAS-free certification — AB 1200 is a California regulatory disclosure, not a third-party verified result.
You're spending $245 and expect premium air frying performance — the wattage-to-capacity ratio doesn't match the price.
You want SGS or Mamavation lab certification confirming the coating is PFAS-free before buying.
You're deciding between this and the Typhur Dome 2 and budget isn't the constraint — the Dome 2 carries independent certification and higher wattage.
Neither of these quite what you're looking for?
I've reviewed all Air Fryer options at every price pointEvery Air Fryer in our database is scored using R3's V4.2 deterministic rubric — the same inputs always produce the same score. For this comparison, we evaluated Our Place and Typhur across 3 independent criteria: Safety (50%), Efficacy (25%), Usability (25%). No sponsored rankings. No paid placements.
Straight answers — no sponsored content, no filler.
The Our Place Large Wonder Oven uses a stainless steel basket with a chromed steel air fryer basket crisper plate. Stainless steel and glass are inherently PFAS-free materials, so this model passes our material safety screen.
Between these two, the Our Place Large Wonder Oven (stainless steel basket, 7.8/10 safety) uses materials I'm more comfortable with at high heat. The Typhur Sync Air Fryer's ceramic nonstick basket scored 6.4/10. In our V4.2 rubric, basket material accounts for a significant portion of the safety pillar, which carries 50% of the overall score.
For families, capacity comes first: Our Place offers 31.7-qt vs Typhur's 8-qt. Noise is worth checking too - Typhur runs quieter at 55dB. For cleanup, Typhur is dishwasher-safe. Overall, I'd lean toward Typhur for most families.
304 stainless steel is inherently PFAS-free and won't off-gas at any cooking temperature. Nonstick coatings (PTFE/Teflon) are stable below 400°F but can begin degrading above that threshold. In our V4.2 rubric, stainless and borosilicate glass baskets consistently score higher on the safety pillar. That said, a well-maintained nonstick basket from a reputable brand still meets safety baselines - it's a question of margin, not danger.
We use our V4.2 deterministic rubric with four weighted pillars: Safety (50%), Efficacy (20%), Usability (20%), and Value (10%). For air fryers, safety evaluates basket material composition, Prop 65 compliance, third-party certifications, and PFAS testing. Efficacy covers cooking performance, temperature accuracy, and capacity-to-wattage ratio. Usability scores noise levels, cleanup ease, and warranty terms. Every score is reproducible - the same product data produces the same score.
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