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No they are not. The thing that separates them is how efficiently they take moisture away from food by moving air around with methods that are not convection.
It's the reason you can get soggier fries in a regular oven when compared to an air fryer.
That said, a lot of air fryers are close to convection ovens because they either missed the concept or were designed poorly.
What??? They're literally convection ovens. They pull in fresh air and blow out moisture with the element very close to the food. Your own link further down pretty much says the same thing.
I disagree. Keep reading down the thread
From your own link... it's a convection oven. Period.
I still disagree, I don't know what else to tell you.
Also in your own quote it is like, not is and has a ,but
It's like calling a fighter jet and a commercial jet the same thing. Yeah they're both jets, but they have different capabilities and purpose.
They're still both jets. The technology is the same. My toaster oven is also a convection oven, but it doesn't magically make it something else. Its still a convection oven. Just because it's got different purposes, doesn't make it some different technology. I think that's what you're getting mixed up on.
But yes it does.
What methods are those? I thought it was just way stronger convection, would love to learn more!
Usually a fan from my experience, pulls air and it's moisture out and pulls fresh air through a heating mechanism or near one
Ah I see, and normal convection just circulates air inside the oven without removing the moisture?
I honestly don't know, I want to say moisture still boils out, just not at the rate of having something dedicated pulling it out.
I'd recommend looking into it. This is just me remembering talking about it with another person on Lemmy a year or two ago, and then looking into it myself.
If I remember right, fries get crispiest in deep fryers because of the density of steam/oil almost immediately getting the moisture away from the outside of the food. Air fryers do their best to imitate that function by manually pulling air.
https://homekitchtech.com/convection-oven-vs-air-fryer-is-a-convection-oven-the-same-as-an-air-fryer/
This article says that some but not all convection ovens use fans for circulation, but air fryers have way more air movement.
The one in my kitchen has a fan on the side that pulls air out right where the basket is, and I think fresh air comes from the opposing side but I could be wrong there.
I guess this could be compared to a cheeseburger being a hamburger, but a hamburger is not always a cheeseburger analogy. Technically an airfyer can be classified as a convection ovens, but a convection oven isn't always an air fryer. It has a different function, cooks quicker, and moves more air closer to food producing different results.
You're confusing convection with conventional.
A convection oven is an oven with a fan to induce convection currents. A conventional oven is a hot box. Air fryers are ovens with fans in them to induce convection currents, ergo air fryers are convection ovens.
I came to that conclusion further down this thread, and tldr same same but different, so it's still different. In the way that a CRT TV is different than LED TV.
They both have their strong suites and do different cooking styles better than the other, much like CRT/LED.
Even America's test kitchen compares air fryers to mini convection ovens from what I recall. I'd trust them over someone random that seems to just want to be technically correct. The main advantage they have is the small area which can heat up quicker, but the way the function is equivalent for most definitions.