Josh Dekubber
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I have a silver B in my scrap pile I could check the thickness of each I could even test the bending strength and thickness versus a 1000 deep cook box
I think it probably does, there is definitely a noticeable difference in weight.Another thought is if on an x000, if the extra 2 inches of vertical height of the cookbox makes a difference.
I've had similar grease fires on my Genesis 1000. I alternate between leaving the lid down to snuff the flames and opening it up to let the excessive heat escape without damaging anything.I do recall one very bad grease fire on my silver B. Cook box fully engulfed. I shutoff burners, pulled the meat ( IIRC it was a bunch of chicken thighs ) turned off the gas at the tank and just let it burn out, but it was really, really hot. Everything was burning from the grates, flav bars, cookbox, slide out pan and the fire even lit the drip pan underneath
I'm curious about the thickness too. I've got a couple in my pile I might be able to reach this weekend and check thickness.
Another thought is if on an x000, if the extra 2 inches of vertical height of the cookbox makes a difference.
I do recall one very bad grease fire on my silver B. Cook box fully engulfed. I shutoff burners, pulled the meat ( IIRC it was a bunch of chicken thighs ) turned off the gas at the tank and just let it burn out, but it was really, really hot. Everything was burning from the grates, flav bars, cookbox, slide out pan and the fire even lit the drip pan underneath.
I think it probably does, there is definitely a noticeable difference in weight.
I've had similar grease fires on my Genesis 1000. I alternate between leaving the lid down to snuff the flames and opening it up to let the excessive heat escape without damaging anything.
Burnt bits from grilling fall on the bottom pan and collect over time. These absorb grease and that adds to the buildup if not cleaned regularly it becomes a bed of fuel under the burners.What’s the root cause of all these grease fires
Great idea.I use 3 grease pan assemblies in rotation so I have a cleanish one available to swap in
I use Grade B or Grade C grease pan assemblies - rusted edges, various defects and use dollar store pan liners. Once they get too ratty I scrap them.Great idea.
IDK, I've used both and honestly have not seen any real differenceSeems to me that the 13 bar boxes with their essentially double bar area for burning off droppings would have a big advantage over the later 5 bar boxes.
Taking this a little farther, less grease on the drip pans should mean longer life for the pans.
Stretching this a bit more, perhaps the reason why they aren’t available now was that they didn’t sell well during the useful life of the grills, so Weber didn’t bother to reorder them….
Larry, I have also, having used a Spirit 700 (with original aluminum drip pan) for over 20 years and didn’t notice a big difference after getting into the big boxes. But then I never had a fire…IDK, I've used both and honestly have not seen any real difference
Josh,I have a silver B in my scrap pile I could check the thickness of each I could even test the bending strength and thickness versus a 1000 deep cook box
Thanks Jon!Josh,
I tried to address this a few years ago. I wish I had taken more time to do more measurements:
Thread 'Measuring Weber Gas Grill Parts Thickness: A move from anecdotal speculation to factual investigation'
https://tvwbb.com/threads/measuring...l-speculation-to-factual-investigation.93769/