What is the Dia of those exhaust Tubes? Did you square the radius and multiply by Pi (3.14)? Assuming 3" pipe, both stacks would be a little over 7" and one stack 3 1/2" so you are definately in the ball park of horse shoes and hand grenades, which seems to be about as close as it takes to work
My Weber lid has 4-1 inch holes or roughly 3.14 square inches You are also onto something with the basket size, I learned the hard way on the 2 units I built this year, My drum basket wound up about 16" dia x 5" deep and it runs rock solid. Your smoker is the first Ive seen using a gate valve on the inlet, let me know how it works for you. |
Well my first smoke I have to call a success! Moist, tender, and smoky.
Took 8 hours for a 5lb brisket, would have been less had I not had to leave for 3 hours. My temps fell whilst I was gone There are some things I will do differently. The exhaust issue is OK but needs work. The stacks are 2". During warm up I experienced what one member said that the temps are high and hard to control. I reached my temp and couldn't throttle it back down to stabilize. I completely blocked one of the stacks and was then able to regulate temperature fairly well. I believe the proper equation of intake vs exhaust is 1:1 My fire basket is too small. The result of this is slow starting, poor temp control, very little smoke at temp, small smoke ring. As you can see there is a non-existent smoke ring. while you can smell it and taste it you cant SEE it. There is enough room for a long burn with the basket at its current size, I shut down with half the basket full. The larger fire basket would let me put in more wood and make more smoke. I think. I had no apple juice for foiling so I used hornsbys hard apple cider, seemed to work good. I want a different wood. I used mesquite because that is what was available. Its good but not my style. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...Picture387.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...Picture389.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...Picture393.jpg http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...Picture394.jpg |
I think you did great for the first cook on the drum... Temp control on one of these just takes a couple of cooks to learn but once you got it, it's a no brainer.
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You'll be fine Scud, like sampson said it just takes a few times to figure what your ugly wants and then you will be fine...actually, sounds like you have it pretty well covered for the first cook. Congrats, it sounds like it went better than most!!! Keep us posted!
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James. |
James, I drilled a couple of small holes in the side of my drum. 1 for the grate temp and one for the meat. The holes are just large enough for the probes to slide in. The grate probe sets usually right in the middle running thru a block of wood.
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Thanks, smooookin... I'm figuring that I need to drill another hole for the probe as well. I don't usually cook with a probe in the meat anymore, so 1 should do me! I hope... :grin:
James. |
James, no probe in the meat? just go by time?
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James. |
Snausage rods for the trashcan...for those that make Slim Jims, Dry Salami and Whatnot...
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Did anyone ever try using a 110 gallon drum? I just got offered a free 30 and 110 gallon drum and was thinking about taking them. You could potentially get 3 shelves in the 110. Don't know if anyone tried it or has pics.
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As long as the diameter corresponds to standard Weber grates.
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the 85 gallon drums ive seen are greater in circum. than the 55 gallons it has a 26 inch inside diameter...anyone know if there are grates that can be bought that are 25-25.5 inch in diameter?? also I saw a post in site somewhere , cant find anymore. said they could buy reconditioned Stainless 55gal drum for about 135 bucks or so..any help would be great |
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