@James ~~ LMAO! That is something I would do, honestly. When I put together my WSM back in June, I had the middle section upside down and had to redo it. Sometimes I'm surprised by how I'm even able to dress myself some days.
@Walker ~~ Awesome! I'm glad things worked out! Enjoy!
I'm three cooks in on my red kettle and I have a couple of thoughts.
The criticisms that people have made about some blemishes on their red kettles are extremely valid, especially when these claims have been made by connoisseurs who collect Weber products like these kettles. I usually have OCD about such things, but this is different, for me. I did my second (and you could arguably say third, too) cook on my kettle yesterday and inspected it. The paint job on mine is not perfect. There are a couple of blemishes (black dots here and there, maybe a couple of 'dimples' on it), but... as long as the grill doesn't fall apart 30 cooks in, it doesn't bother me. This is my first ever Weber kettle. I'm already loving it. I smoked two racks of baby back ribs on it yesterday, and then I fired up some coals (a little under 3/4 full) in the chimney and grilled two chicken breasts. They both came out great!
But going back to my mindset... the criticisms are valid. It should arrive in pristine shape. But it's a grill and it's going to get filthy unless not used. I have my outdoor cookware in my garage. Bought a $1.50 Backyard Grills cover for my red kettle.
Y'know what I might love the most? How quickly this grill cools down after you shut down the vents. My old grill, a STOK drum charcoal grill (a fantastic grill, by the way, even if it isn't a Weber), took forever to cool down. Of course, I used the STOK for most of the summer when it was extremely hot out, and I've only used my kettle in this cool weather, so I guess the true test will be next summer when it's hot and I'm grilling 73/27 burgers.
I'm just curious to see how long this paint job on the kettle will last. Hopefully forever, but you know how that goes.