Cassondra
TVWBB Super Fan
Hello all, and thank you to those who welcomed me so kindly in the introductions.
I have already learned more than I knew, which is...how to find the model and year of my older grill. Apparently my grill is a 2012 E310.
This Weber was our first "big" purchase after we bought our old house (an 1849, falling-down farmhouse we vowed to restore. We are still working on the old house, and likely will be for the rest of our lives)
BUT...our Weber has fed us more nights than the indoor stove has. (Right now I will confess we have the kitchen torn apart and I don't HAVE an indoor range. Toaster oven, hotplate, microwave inside, Blackstone and the falling-apart Weber outside. When I say I have depended on the Weber, I mean that literally).
I took great care of our grill until life (elder care for my mom and health issues for my husband) got in the way, then the house, and everything associated with it, took second place.
Today I went looking for a used Weber, because I thought our old grill was too far gone. I hit on this forum in a search, and realized the "rusted out bottom" of our grill is not really the bottom of the grill, and can be replaced!
So here I am. I know nothing, but I love this grill, I'm decent with tools, and willing to buy whatever is needed (hopefully I CAN afford it) to fix my old friend. I owe it that, as it has so often fed us over these years. I can't even tell you how much of a tank this grill has been. For several years I've been lighting it with a grill lighter cuz the ignitor hasn't worked, and I've been using fish cooker thingies on top of the grates to keep metal pieces out of our food, but this grill just keeps on cooking when other grills would have long-since crashed and burned. It is kept outside on our deck, but there is no bad rust anywhere on it. I feel kind of ridiculous because I'm so attached to this grill.
So...here it is. Please forgive how dirty it is.
It's been a rough few months, but I commit to make it better. Y'all will see that the back deck has been left for a later part of our restoration project. The neighbor's ducks don't care and regularly use the grill as a perch. (Not happy about this.)

Bottom of the box...I was shocked to realize everything is intact. I beat around on this trying to find weak spots, and I didn't find any. Even the grease drip pan is fine. It all needs a serious cleaning. I will have questions about how to do that. I don't know if I need new burners. These work. I just light them one-at-a-time with a grill lighter.

Things that will need replaced for sure:
The bottom thingies.....Yeah..they're bad.

The "flavorizer bars"--they were "fine" until I took them out. (No they weren't fine, but they were intact, kinda.) Now one of them is kinda propped up to keep it together.

The grill grates...
I flipped them upside down a few years back, so I could get a bit more use out of them cuz they were getting metal flakes in the food. Now the bottom is just as bad, so I put a platter with holes, made for grilling fish, on top of them because they are toast. (you can see the fish thingy underneath the grates) I priced new cast iron, non-stick grates a couple of years back. The cost is part of why I thought I would have to ditch the Weber. Today I saw that some folks replace with stainless steel grates, so I am interested in options. The non-stick was nice, but not worth $300 to me. I will learn to adapt with other grates.

So that's my Weber story. We also have a Weber charcoal kettle, which sears the best steak I've ever cooked. But the gas grill is fast and easy, and is my go-to tool for everyday cooking. I would like to do right by it, and I look forward to knowing all of you and learning from you about how to restore my old grill, and become a better grill cook.
Thank you in advance for all the help I know you will give.

I have already learned more than I knew, which is...how to find the model and year of my older grill. Apparently my grill is a 2012 E310.
This Weber was our first "big" purchase after we bought our old house (an 1849, falling-down farmhouse we vowed to restore. We are still working on the old house, and likely will be for the rest of our lives)
BUT...our Weber has fed us more nights than the indoor stove has. (Right now I will confess we have the kitchen torn apart and I don't HAVE an indoor range. Toaster oven, hotplate, microwave inside, Blackstone and the falling-apart Weber outside. When I say I have depended on the Weber, I mean that literally).
I took great care of our grill until life (elder care for my mom and health issues for my husband) got in the way, then the house, and everything associated with it, took second place.
Today I went looking for a used Weber, because I thought our old grill was too far gone. I hit on this forum in a search, and realized the "rusted out bottom" of our grill is not really the bottom of the grill, and can be replaced!
So here I am. I know nothing, but I love this grill, I'm decent with tools, and willing to buy whatever is needed (hopefully I CAN afford it) to fix my old friend. I owe it that, as it has so often fed us over these years. I can't even tell you how much of a tank this grill has been. For several years I've been lighting it with a grill lighter cuz the ignitor hasn't worked, and I've been using fish cooker thingies on top of the grates to keep metal pieces out of our food, but this grill just keeps on cooking when other grills would have long-since crashed and burned. It is kept outside on our deck, but there is no bad rust anywhere on it. I feel kind of ridiculous because I'm so attached to this grill.
So...here it is. Please forgive how dirty it is.


Bottom of the box...I was shocked to realize everything is intact. I beat around on this trying to find weak spots, and I didn't find any. Even the grease drip pan is fine. It all needs a serious cleaning. I will have questions about how to do that. I don't know if I need new burners. These work. I just light them one-at-a-time with a grill lighter.

Things that will need replaced for sure:
The bottom thingies.....Yeah..they're bad.

The "flavorizer bars"--they were "fine" until I took them out. (No they weren't fine, but they were intact, kinda.) Now one of them is kinda propped up to keep it together.


The grill grates...
I flipped them upside down a few years back, so I could get a bit more use out of them cuz they were getting metal flakes in the food. Now the bottom is just as bad, so I put a platter with holes, made for grilling fish, on top of them because they are toast. (you can see the fish thingy underneath the grates) I priced new cast iron, non-stick grates a couple of years back. The cost is part of why I thought I would have to ditch the Weber. Today I saw that some folks replace with stainless steel grates, so I am interested in options. The non-stick was nice, but not worth $300 to me. I will learn to adapt with other grates.

So that's my Weber story. We also have a Weber charcoal kettle, which sears the best steak I've ever cooked. But the gas grill is fast and easy, and is my go-to tool for everyday cooking. I would like to do right by it, and I look forward to knowing all of you and learning from you about how to restore my old grill, and become a better grill cook.
Thank you in advance for all the help I know you will give.
