What I think/ Your wife should stay out of the conversation because she doesn't know what she is talking about. Unless she is a hottie.... then she can say what she wants. You know, just it allows you to have an excuse to watch her mouth move.
Now YOU--- you are okay... I am fine with you... but me saying what I said allows ME to take the heat for probably telling her what you have been wanting to for years.
Stokers are legal in every competition I can think of yet boiling is not... and frankly... men were boiling large cuts of meat in strong stocks and laying them on pits LONG before the Food and Drug act of 1905 spelled the end to pits in favor of ovens... which essentially are what we all use now... ovens. THEY are NOT pits...Not even my brazos... though I call it one.
My take on Stokers....
If you go on to youtube and type in "barbecue and stoker," you will see I pretty much own the results.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=barbecue+stoker&aq=f
I get more hits than even he does and even challenge him on Google.
I cannot stand the way John Jackson runs his business and other than the power supply's problems when you get to the 25CFM fans, I endorse it strongly.
Rock designed the platform before doing higher output fans and when you get to 25cfm, they pretty much can do only one fan and with no long cords.
I so wish he would sell his great product to someone who knows how to run customer service. He is also one who holds a grudge based on a lie as he has never thanked me for taking the time to disspell the old "under 30 F malfunction" some claimed the unit had. It didn't as my experiment proves.
I also spent considerable time showing his product COULD be used on larger pits (1000 lbs) if routed properly.
My wife just found out about Stokers. She was less than Stoked. She thinks it's "cheating". Her theory is, if you have to use a computer to control your heat, you might as well cook in the oven. She was amazed to learn they are legal at competitions. I finally got her to recognize that for a long/overnight cook at home, they'd keep you from getting up every couple of hours. But she still thinks manual temp. control is part of a BBQers "skill".
I've always thought they were a neat device, but I never contemplated buying one, mainly because of the price.
Don't misunderstand, I'm not knocking anyone who uses one, I'm just curious what other folks think.
YOU know... Now that I think of it....I should put back up my first two tries with the stoker when the unit malfunctioned and I had a 700 degree pit.
we had to exchange stoker parts several times.
Matt