ah...step one...Remove the propane tankI think it will fit with the seats folded down. Bring couple of yard sized garbage bags, a box for the grates and flav bars, and a blanket or two to wrap the lid and stuff. a couple of garage towels is also good.
A tarp for the back to catch the crunchies that will fall out.
Tools you will need
leather gloves
small flat blade screwdriver
7/16 wrench. ratcheting box or small socket works well.
pliers or vice grips.
( might be needed )
small hammer and punch.
ziplock to store the bolts
1) pull the cotter pins and remove the pins from the lid. Put these in the zip lock so you don't lose them.
remove the lid, set aside on something soft. It may end up in the front seat wrapped in a blanket depending on space
2) remove the doors. Flat blade screw driver will pull the upper hinge pins down. Set these aside on something soft.
3) remove grates, flav bars and under burner heat deflectors and put all these in the box in a garbage bag. Open the side burner and remove the trivet and the round burner thing. Remove the slide out drip pan and grease pan inside and put that in the box.
4) Remove the side tables. two 7/16 bolts. Burner has a quick connect. Once the bolts are out just tap the tables up with your hand.
AT that point it ** should fit ** . Be careful of the hinge ears on the back of the cook box as they want to dig into the carpet. A couple of towels or some cardboard helps to slide it in.
Wrap the doors in towels and they'll fit inside where the propane tank would go
There should be room for the box of grates tilted up on its side up against the bottom floor or the grill.
Wrap the side tables in towels and find a spot for them.
Wrap up the lid in blankets and let it ride shotgun in the passenger seat.
DANG! This is pretty specific - for the grill AND the vehicle.I think it will fit with the seats folded down. Bring couple of yard sized garbage bags, a box for the grates and flav bars, and a blanket or two to wrap the lid and stuff. a couple of garage towels is also good.
A tarp for the back to catch the crunchies that will fall out.
Tools you will need
leather gloves
small flat blade screwdriver
7/16 wrench. ratcheting box or small socket works well.
pliers or vice grips.
( might be needed )
small hammer and punch.
ziplock to store the bolts
1) pull the cotter pins and remove the pins from the lid. Put these in the zip lock so you don't lose them.
remove the lid, set aside on something soft. It may end up in the front seat wrapped in a blanket depending on space
2) remove the doors. Flat blade screw driver will pull the upper hinge pins down. Set these aside on something soft.
3) remove grates, flav bars and under burner heat deflectors and put all these in the box in a garbage bag. Open the side burner and remove the trivet and the round burner thing. Remove the slide out drip pan and grease pan inside and put that in the box.
4) Remove the side tables. two 7/16 bolts. Burner has a quick connect. Once the bolts are out just tap the tables up with your hand.
AT that point it ** should fit ** . Be careful of the hinge ears on the back of the cook box as they want to dig into the carpet. A couple of towels or some cardboard helps to slide it in.
Wrap the doors in towels and they'll fit inside where the propane tank would go
There should be room for the box of grates tilted up on its side up against the bottom floor or the grill.
Wrap the side tables in towels and find a spot for them.
Wrap up the lid in blankets and let it ride shotgun in the passenger seat.
I'm guessing on the outback, but yeah, I collected a few E330s this summer.DANG! This is pretty specific - for the grill AND the vehicle.Guessing this ain't your first rodeo. LOL
I hope Davis gets some good use out of all this info.![]()
I would like to have seen that haul!Hey, I took my Wolf home in the back of a little Saturn Vue! So a little Genesis should with careful packing get hauled out in an Outback
My advice is take a lot of photos during the disassembly, packing and set up once home.I'm looking at a Genesis E-330 on Craigslist and wondering if it will fit (without major disassembly) in the back of my 2012 Outback. Any and all advice welcome, thanks!
In college I moved a couch like this, half supported in the back of a Honda Civic and me walking behind and holding the other half. Took my arms weeks to recover. Never again ...Have you ever seen that photo of the car driving down the city street with a passenger sitting in the trunk holding a cabinet style behind it rolling down the road.
Here you go:I would like to have seen that haul!
Ha Ha... Yup, a long frame Genesis (Silver C, 2000, 3000, 2) will fit in the Prius (it's a second gen Prius, one of the older hatchback type). I do a little dismantling (remove lid and cookbox) and they go right in - can even close the hatch. I got a 2005 Silver B with a full cabinet in there but it wasn't easy - that was awkward and heavy.I’m always amazed at what John G (Boston) gets into his Prius![]()
Green tailgating? and you don't pay $50 to park!Here you go:
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Bicycle Cargo Trailer
Bicycle Cargo Trailer: Have you ever wanted to take something extra with you when you ride your bike, but didn't know how you could get it on the bike and still be able to ride? I have, and believe me one of my favorite challenges about bike riding is figuring out h…www.instructables.com
View attachment 63159
Pics?Reporting back! Thanks again to DanHoo for the step-by-step. As recommended I first pulled the grates, flavor bars, etc. to avoid things rattling around in transit. I removed the lid and one side table (the one without the side burner) and was able to squeeze the E-330 into my Outback. I could have left the lid on but took it off to minimize upholstery damage. All set up on the other side and just waiting on a chance to refill propane and get cooking!