PeterD
TVWBB Super Fan
I'm about 2/3 the way through what has been, unwaveringly, the most difficult cook I've ever done. Two butts on at precisely midnight. Took about 90 minutes for temps to stabilize at 230 so I set the Maverick's alarm and hit the rack for hopefully a few hours' rest.
Couldn't sleep a wink until about 4, then at 5:45 the low-temp alarm sounds. I get up, open up a couple of vents, spritz the meat with A.J....and then look to the west. It was pitch black; that roiling, seething mass of cumulonimbus that you just know is about to thoroughly mess with your day. The deluge began around 6 and lasted until 7:30 and my grate temp was crashing badly, despite all 3 vents open wide. When it hit 175 (meat at 165) I ventured out, inverted the door and propped it upside-down on the screws and that got things sorted out for about half an hour.
By then it was time to turn the butts over and it was at that point that things started to go pear shaped. Since that time I've been chasing the ET-73 from one extreme to the other. Too cold (190 and dropping), fuel low. Add more lump, crack the door a tad, it jumps to 275 within 3 minutes. Close the door, close the bottom vents and it stays at 275. Open the lid, spritz, leave it off for a minute to help dissipate the heat, lid back on, shoots up to 280 almost immediately before dropping. And so on and so forth, all morning. At this point, all I want is a stable cooker temp so I can try and get another hour's rest (party starting at 3 and I'm on about 90 minutes' sleep). Door is closed, 2 vents closed, the third at 1/2-open and the temps are falling through 250. After what's gone on before, I just know they're not going to play nice and hold at 230 to 240, but rather will just drop until the low-temp alarm goes off again. Like I said, most difficult cook ever and probably the last overnighter I ever attempt until I get a blower system.
Couldn't sleep a wink until about 4, then at 5:45 the low-temp alarm sounds. I get up, open up a couple of vents, spritz the meat with A.J....and then look to the west. It was pitch black; that roiling, seething mass of cumulonimbus that you just know is about to thoroughly mess with your day. The deluge began around 6 and lasted until 7:30 and my grate temp was crashing badly, despite all 3 vents open wide. When it hit 175 (meat at 165) I ventured out, inverted the door and propped it upside-down on the screws and that got things sorted out for about half an hour.
By then it was time to turn the butts over and it was at that point that things started to go pear shaped. Since that time I've been chasing the ET-73 from one extreme to the other. Too cold (190 and dropping), fuel low. Add more lump, crack the door a tad, it jumps to 275 within 3 minutes. Close the door, close the bottom vents and it stays at 275. Open the lid, spritz, leave it off for a minute to help dissipate the heat, lid back on, shoots up to 280 almost immediately before dropping. And so on and so forth, all morning. At this point, all I want is a stable cooker temp so I can try and get another hour's rest (party starting at 3 and I'm on about 90 minutes' sleep). Door is closed, 2 vents closed, the third at 1/2-open and the temps are falling through 250. After what's gone on before, I just know they're not going to play nice and hold at 230 to 240, but rather will just drop until the low-temp alarm goes off again. Like I said, most difficult cook ever and probably the last overnighter I ever attempt until I get a blower system.