David Funk
TVWBB Member
I have an older one (10 years old or so). I recently purchased a new one for a dear friend of mine.
The new one has a much deeper water pan, includes a factory themometer, has a heat shield below the firebox, and a better handle on the side door.
So I did two pork butts on the new one (after "breaking it in" with 5 racks of baby back ribs). The end result was great, but I had some difficulty keeping the lid temperature up. All through the night, I had to run the lower vents completely open, and occasionally open the side door to get the temp up to 225 or so. On my older one, the temp stabilizes (to around 225) after a couple of hours, with the lower vents about 1/4 open. Not so on the the new one.
The larger water pan takes up a lot more room in the firebox, which reduces the available air space. Maybe that's the reason... ?
With my older one, I can sleep through the night. I have to babysit the new one.
I use the Minion method, with Kingsford briquets. On an overnighter like this, I fill the firering to the top.
Any thoughts on this?
The new one has a much deeper water pan, includes a factory themometer, has a heat shield below the firebox, and a better handle on the side door.
So I did two pork butts on the new one (after "breaking it in" with 5 racks of baby back ribs). The end result was great, but I had some difficulty keeping the lid temperature up. All through the night, I had to run the lower vents completely open, and occasionally open the side door to get the temp up to 225 or so. On my older one, the temp stabilizes (to around 225) after a couple of hours, with the lower vents about 1/4 open. Not so on the the new one.
The larger water pan takes up a lot more room in the firebox, which reduces the available air space. Maybe that's the reason... ?
With my older one, I can sleep through the night. I have to babysit the new one.
I use the Minion method, with Kingsford briquets. On an overnighter like this, I fill the firering to the top.
Any thoughts on this?