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Feldon's calculator has some issues, particularly with reverse flow smokers. The calculators at Smoking Meat Forums I linked to above will nearly always work well, especially for reverse flow smokers. And you'll find a lot of knowledgeable pit builders who can answer questions or double check your calculations. Far better to get a second opinion from someone who has built the same style of pit before than to have to go back and rebuild or replace a smoker. They might also have ideas to improve a smoker that needs help.BillE.Dee wrote:I built 2 different smokers. I used feldon's bbq pit builder calculator. It will give size variations and necessary sizes for opening to transfer heat and what size chimney you need. My one smoker is a vertical type with fire box below the cooking chamber and the other is a side box fire box. I seem to be having problems with producing too much creosote and that puts bad taste in the meat. I have used various hardwoods with apple and mesquite for flavor. Couldn't find pipe big enough so I bought plate and tried to find someone to roll the plates. Had one guy tell me he could do it.....failure. Found another company that could roll it, but I would have to mortgage the teepee. Square worked.
Feldon's calculator has some issues, particularly with reverse flow smokers. The calculators at Smoking Meat Forums I linked to above will nearly always work well, especially for reverse flow smokers. And you'll find a lot of knowledgeable pit builders who can answer questions or double check your calculations. Far better to get a second opinion from someone who has built the same style of pit before than to have to go back and rebuild or replace a smoker. They might also have ideas to improve a smoker that needs help.BillE.Dee wrote:I built 2 different smokers. I used feldon's bbq pit builder calculator. It will give size variations and necessary sizes for opening to transfer heat and what size chimney you need. My one smoker is a vertical type with fire box below the cooking chamber and the other is a side box fire box. I seem to be having problems with producing too much creosote and that puts bad taste in the meat. I have used various hardwoods with apple and mesquite for flavor. Couldn't find pipe big enough so I bought plate and tried to find someone to roll the plates. Had one guy tell me he could do it.....failure. Found another company that could roll it, but I would have to mortgage the teepee. Square worked.
Feldon's calculator has some issues, particularly with reverse flow smokers. The calculators at Smoking Meat Forums I linked to above will nearly always work well, especially for reverse flow smokers. And you'll find a lot of knowledgeable pit builders who can answer questions or double check your calculations. Far better to get a second opinion from someone who has built the same style of pit before than to have to go back and rebuild or replace a smoker. They might also have ideas to improve a smoker that needs help.BillE.Dee wrote:I built 2 different smokers. I used feldon's bbq pit builder calculator. It will give size variations and necessary sizes for opening to transfer heat and what size chimney you need. My one smoker is a vertical type with fire box below the cooking chamber and the other is a side box fire box. I seem to be having problems with producing too much creosote and that puts bad taste in the meat. I have used various hardwoods with apple and mesquite for flavor. Couldn't find pipe big enough so I bought plate and tried to find someone to roll the plates. Had one guy tell me he could do it.....failure. Found another company that could roll it, but I would have to mortgage the teepee. Square worked.
Thank you Lance for the terrific feedback, I appreciate it! You mentioned a link ... I searched the thread but couldn't find that link. Could you provide it again?LanceR wrote:Feldon's calculator has some issues, particularly with reverse flow smokers. The calculators at Smoking Meat Forums I linked to above will nearly always work well, especially for reverse flow smokers. And you'll find a lot of knowledgeable pit builders who can answer questions or double check your calculations. Far better to get a second opinion from someone who has built the same style of pit before than to have to go back and rebuild or replace a smoker. They might also have ideas to improve a smoker that needs help.
Fantastic information, thanks!LanceR wrote:Reverse flow smokers, where the smoke runs the length of the cook chamber under a fixed plate and reverses to flow back through the cook chamber to vent at the firebox end, tend to be much easier to regulate temperatures in than standard offset smokers with the exhaust at the opposite end from the firebox. They call the moveable plate(s) under the cooking area in straight through smokers "tuning plates" because they need fiddling with. Reverse flow smokers made correctly don't need fiddling with and generally hold even temps in the 25*F range across the width of the smoker.
As Oscar said, creosote is not the result of temperatures. Creosote comes from incomplete combustion and is generally related to an airflow issue.
The thick wall thickness may affect how long it takes to initially warm up but thicker walls also help with fast temperature recovery after having the doors open and with temperature stabilization in gusty winds. If the requisite area of combustion air intakes is split around 80/20 between intakes below the fire grate and at the top of the firebox across from the opening to the cook chamber the upper vents will allow more flexibility in temperature control, not to mention cleaner secondary combustion, including lowering temperatures quickly
The key element is that it's not burning out in the open. Out in the open in the abundance of oxygen, it will indeed burn clean. But that is not the typical scenario inside a smoker, where the airflow has to be purposely metered in conjunction with the mass and sizes/shapes of the wood logs/chunks. It's a double edged sword: You can't get a super clean burn because you can't have a raging fire going on in there, unless the "chunks" are the size of chips, at which point it's counter productive to keep opening the firebox every 5 minutes to dump more chips in there. The necessary evil is that the logs/chunks must be sized as to provide a good burning time, but also to burn decently clean. This is where choosing the size/shape of the logs/chunks becomes the "art" of learning how the smoker behaves with respect to burn-time and temperature. You want the logs/chunks sizes so that, upon their addition, the remainder of the burning coals is "dying out" at just the right rate so that by the time the logs/chunks start to catch on fire, they are also doing so and releasing heat at the same rate to keep the temperature decently stabilized, so they kinda equalize each other, and round and round you go as you keep on adding firewood until you are done cooking. In a smaller smoker like mine, the addition of new firewood ends up using up a good amount of oxygen, so I usually open the air intake vents completely to make sure they catch on fire good without them suffocating what coals are already there. After a couple minutes, I reduce the vent openings back the the "usual" positions, and I can go back to sleep for another 1.5-2 hours before I have to wake up again to add just the right amount of extra firewood. Then after about 24-30 hours of doing this, out comes the most tender brisket ever.BugHunter wrote:I figure the wood is the wood. I'm not sure how you can make it burn any more "clean",
You stop by and I'm sure you won't be hungry when you leave. I'm probably going to make onion rolls tonight for ham sandwiches so it's a soup/sandwiches thing. Only thing missing is there's no more tomatoes from the garden cept for cherry tomatoes... Gonna have to be store-bought ones that suck.BillE.Dee wrote:hey buggy,,,,I KNOW where you live !!!!
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