Bill Gailey
New member
I recently sold my Lang 60 smoker and replaced it with a 22.5 WSM and did my first smoke on Sunday. Two pork butts, full ring of Kingsford coals, used the Minion method with a half chimney of lit coals to start. Used 4 fist sized hickory chunks buried in the coal for smoke. Came up to temp within the first 20 minutes. I filled the water pan full (3 gallons) according to directions with the cooker. Did not have to add any water. Temp stayed at 225-250 all day except for a periodic spike to 300 which I attributed to the hardwood chunk periodically catching fire. Foiled the btts at 160 and continued to 190 in about 8 hours. Pulled off smoker. placed in holding pan with towel wrapped for about 2 hours before pulling. Meat was perfectly smoked, good smoke ring and bark and very moist.
Nothing but great satisfaction until after the smoke. For most of the smoke I had the bottom dampers almost completely closed and the top damper about 50% closed. I closed all dampers after taking the meat off at 3pm. My problem is the the cooker was still at 150 degrees the next morning. It took nearly 24 hours to cool down to clean and cover.
I don't understand why the cooker didn't choke out the fire once the dampers were closed. I also have a Performer I have had for years and when you close the damper on it the fire is out and the cooker is cold in less than 2 hours. Do the little tabs on the damper that keeps them from completely closing really allow that much air in? The door didn't leak nearly as much as I had expected from reading the forum although I am sure it lets air into the cooker.
If this is normal for the fire to die out how in the world do you use one of these at a comp and ever get to pack up and go home? Do i need to clip[ off the tabs on the dampers? My performer doesn't have the tab so you can close both dampers completely.
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
Nothing but great satisfaction until after the smoke. For most of the smoke I had the bottom dampers almost completely closed and the top damper about 50% closed. I closed all dampers after taking the meat off at 3pm. My problem is the the cooker was still at 150 degrees the next morning. It took nearly 24 hours to cool down to clean and cover.
I don't understand why the cooker didn't choke out the fire once the dampers were closed. I also have a Performer I have had for years and when you close the damper on it the fire is out and the cooker is cold in less than 2 hours. Do the little tabs on the damper that keeps them from completely closing really allow that much air in? The door didn't leak nearly as much as I had expected from reading the forum although I am sure it lets air into the cooker.
If this is normal for the fire to die out how in the world do you use one of these at a comp and ever get to pack up and go home? Do i need to clip[ off the tabs on the dampers? My performer doesn't have the tab so you can close both dampers completely.
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.