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Don't let that smoke leaking out of the crack of the door go to waste! After purchasing a gasket from bbqgaskets.com and installing it, the smoke only comes out the chimney now and the temperature is more consistent on the dial.
Quote from: spddmn6 on September 08, 2017, 09:15:15 AMDon't let that smoke leaking out of the crack of the door go to waste! After purchasing a gasket from bbqgaskets.com and installing it, the smoke only comes out the chimney now and the temperature is more consistent on the dial.Thanks for the tip.How do you keep it smoking when cooking something at higher temperatures? It seems that very little smoke is produced at over 150 degrees.
Quote from: lokidog on September 08, 2017, 10:52:54 AMQuote from: spddmn6 on September 08, 2017, 09:15:15 AMDon't let that smoke leaking out of the crack of the door go to waste! After purchasing a gasket from bbqgaskets.com and installing it, the smoke only comes out the chimney now and the temperature is more consistent on the dial.Thanks for the tip.How do you keep it smoking when cooking something at higher temperatures? It seems that very little smoke is produced at over 150 degrees.That's exactly it. The high heat just makes it a fancy outdoor oven that uses pellets and puts a hint of smoke on the food. Sealing it up will help a little. Which is better than nothing. When on the smoke setting it is most concentrated. Works great on my pulled pork. Smoke for 3 hours then bump heat up to 250 until done. Very convenient on long cooks if you don't want to add charcoal or wood all the time. Be sure to check the hopper before doing a long cook to save yourself the trouble of running dry.
I'm tempted to try plugging up the chimney a little on high heat cooking -not all the way- but maybe half way with the door gasket in place. I get a lot of smoke coming out the bucket spout too.
Quote from: spddmn6 on September 08, 2017, 11:04:15 AMQuote from: lokidog on September 08, 2017, 10:52:54 AMQuote from: spddmn6 on September 08, 2017, 09:15:15 AMDon't let that smoke leaking out of the crack of the door go to waste! After purchasing a gasket from bbqgaskets.com and installing it, the smoke only comes out the chimney now and the temperature is more consistent on the dial.Thanks for the tip.How do you keep it smoking when cooking something at higher temperatures? It seems that very little smoke is produced at over 150 degrees.That's exactly it. The high heat just makes it a fancy outdoor oven that uses pellets and puts a hint of smoke on the food. Sealing it up will help a little. Which is better than nothing. When on the smoke setting it is most concentrated. Works great on my pulled pork. Smoke for 3 hours then bump heat up to 250 until done. Very convenient on long cooks if you don't want to add charcoal or wood all the time. Be sure to check the hopper before doing a long cook to save yourself the trouble of running dry.So far, I'm not super impressed, I haven't used it a lot yet but I miss the browned crunch on the top of my grilled salmon.
Quote from: KFhunter on September 08, 2017, 11:18:56 AMI'm tempted to try plugging up the chimney a little on high heat cooking -not all the way- but maybe half way with the door gasket in place. I get a lot of smoke coming out the bucket spout too. You got me curious now....I might have to play around a bit. I have hardly ever messed with the chimney distance itself. I forgot about something else I purchased on Amazon to get even more smoke. Search for (A Maze N Pellet Tube Smoker). I bought the 6" and 12" tubes. They are still very new to me. I have used it only a couple times. I haven't used it enough times to really judge the smokey goodness though. The 12" tube will go for about 3 hours. DO NOT grab those things bare handed when they're hot. It hurts.