If you want the stainless frame then look for an 05-06 Genesis Platinum. Hard to come by but they pop up here and there.
As far as cleaning the firebox, if you want it shiny clean then nothing will beat an angle grinder and cup brush. I've been there and done that though and now resort to using Sam's Club oven and grill cleaner and a pressure washer because it's easier and less time consuming. It won't get it nice and shiny though, just clean enough for me at least.
No the hole pnly gets bigger. If you take a piece of material and heat it it all gets bigger all domensuons. If there is a hole it gets bigger. If you think of the sheet getting heated it enlarges. Including the very spot where there woild be a hole. Iow what do yoi think happens with the piece of metal where there is a circle drawn? That part of the metal would expand too.Yes, that is correct, try not to heat the bolt. However, I believe aluminum expands at a faster rate than steel (correct me if I'm wrong), so heating the bolt as well as the surrounding aluminum should still help as long as you aren't concentrating the heat on the bolt.
Now, here is the question for the engineering types:
If you heat the area around the bolt, and not the whole side of the firebox, are we sure that the expanding aluminum is not expanding into the bolt, making it tighter? It's not like a nut where the whole nut will expand.
There is another school of thought that says heat the bolt and it will expand in the hole and stretch the aluminum and maybe crush some rust (constrained expansion?) and when it cools it will be looser.
Gerry
I think you are right. The area you are heating will expand and warp the sheet of metal if you don't heat the whole sheet.No the hole pnly gets bigger. If you take a piece of material and heat it it all gets bigger all domensuons. If there is a hole it gets bigger. If you think of the sheet getting heated it enlarges. Including the very spot where there woild be a hole. Iow what do yoi think happens with the piece of metal where there is a circle drawn? That part of the metal would expand too.
Tldr
The hole gets bigger
It will put pressure on it the same as if you had stretched or compressed it an equal amount. That is one way to reset buildings with a heated rod stretching or growing then tighten the plates and as the rod cools it pulls the building back together.I think you are right. The area you are heating will expand and warp the sheet of metal if you don't heat the whole sheet.
Thanks! I had to think about that for a bit!
Cheers
I've seen evidence of the rod and plate thing to stabilize old brick buildings. Keeps the walls from spreading and dropping the floor joists. Is that what you mean by "reset buildings"?It will put pressure on it the same as if you had stretched or compressed it an equal amount. That is one way to reset buildings with a heated rod stretching or growing then tighten the plates and as the rod cools it pulls the building back together.
Iamgine two sheets, same but one with a hole cut out. Heat both, same thing happens. Hole gets bigger. If you heat the section you cut out, same.
In your example, heating only a portikn can render a warp or such, however in metal it is usually fast enough to spread, or well then yes buckle.
Exactly!I've seen evidence of the rod and plate thing to stabilize old brick buildings. Keeps the walls from spreading and dropping the floor joists. Is that what you mean by "reset buildings"?
Ed, if you look at that table, you will notice that there are two nubs along the grill box side of that Thermoset table that hold it about 1/8 to 3/16" off the cross member. If you don't see the nubs, then you have the side table on up side down.It could be that the acorn nut has a second purpose, to keep the table from shifting too close to the crossmember next to the firebox. Some durawood versions have a spacer plate for this (Bruce said it doesn't work all that well, and I didn't ask him how he knew).
EDIT: A non-issue with the thermoset tables. My '05 Silver C has the table right next to the crossmember.