Dave it's looking great. We bought the oven gasket rope or whatever it's properly known as at the local hardware store. Real cheap and works like a charm. Put it on with food safe high temp silicone (one of the perks when he works for a sheet metal company)! Anyway, get this thing done and running so I can post it to FB and Twitter!!!!!Cool.....I am still working on Lynn to let me have a smoke house too. Not happening yet. Guess I can just watch yall and be happy for now.
Your smoke house is so nice neat and tidy!
Kat
LOL....... Be sure to let me know when I fall into that group.......(trusted ones) that is.......Thanks Dave! I am very new to all this and am just going by what I have read from the trusted ones. I know nepas usually runs his PID 120*-170* until his sticks/sausage hits 152* IT, Boykjo also heats his sausage to 152* so that's why I am wanting to be able to get the chamber temps up to 170* and even 180* to be safe.
LOL....... Be sure to let me know when I fall into that group.......(trusted ones) that is.......
I was thinking he meant the concrete was acting as an heat sink. (concrete masonry unit) Dave, also i don't know what you decided to use for airflow but those eco fans would be ideal for your situation since your heat isn't getting that high.I haven't tried it yet but that was one of my ideas, raise it to make the chamber smaller.
OK you got me, what is a CMU?
Yea those eco fans just aren't suited for high heat...i'm thinking the heat rating was somewhere in the range of 200 or 250....the circuitry would fry otherwise. I'll be getting one but more for the intended purpose, circulate heat not from a wood stove but a propane wall heater.I think that's what he meant too, just trying to figure out the acronym.
I think the heat is pretty even, I had 2 probes hanging just below half way down and 1 near the top and there was only 3* difference. I didn't check down closer to the element.
I'm just using draft for airflow right now and the smoke was flowing from the bottom out the top vents real nice last night.
I might look into a fan, DaveOmak suggested the same thing somewhere.
We've been getting rain since last Friday. We have had as much rain the last seven days as we normally get in 6 months this time of year!!! So I feel your pain! Supposed to be 90* tomorrow and 97* by Sunday, Yikes!!!Thanks DS! That makes a lot of sense, we have had a lot of rain lately and my yard is saturated and the concrete is wet, inside too. I just happen to have a piece of Durock left over that is just about the right size, might need one cut!
Another storm moving in right now so not sure if I'll get anything done tonight.
Dave, I would try it with out the slate first, just to see what happens. I like to go the "less is more route", or KISS method. Also putting the element off the durock is a good idea and I meant to mention that earlier. There was another thread here where the guy burnt through the Durock.Right now the element is just sitting on a couple of concrete pavers down in the hole. If I put it up out of the hole on the Durock I will make some legs for it with 4" bolts, that way it will have an air gap between the element mounting plate and the Durock. It has to have legs or something because the way the wire comes out of it from the bottom, it can't just sit flat. I'm thinking this just might work.
What do you think of putting a 16"X16"X1/2" slate tile a couple of inches above the element as a thermal mass?