I got the hole for the firebox cut and the plate steel welded to the firebox for the firebox door.
You may want to rethink that stack. Looks very small to me. The only part that counts is what is poking above the smoker. Did you calculate it?
Great idea using the rebar! I spent FOREVER fitting my two together so I wouldn't have a huge gap to fill. lol
http://s10.photobucket.com/user/SxFxZ/media/F4A9BC5E-A7E8-43C9-9329-F410190D2391.jpg.html
It is what I had. They are 6" Square tube from a light pole. I originally made the stacks that short because the volume is what was recommended from the feldon calculator. If that makes sense. I am going for the Franklin method plus the longer stacks do look nicer haha.Why 2 stacks? Yeah I would assume you'd want an 8-10" stack at least 6 feet long.
That is if you're going for the whole Franklin strong draft concept. Which I must say works absolutely great.
Yes I do. I have a pretty big shed that I am going to build the trailer in but I didn't have any lights in the shed when I started the smoker. Plus with the cool weather we have been having I'm glad I was outside in the sun. My neighbors probably think I'm crazy but once they try the BBQ it will all make sense.Looks good. It looks like you have the same work shop that I have. Lots of natural light!!
Yes I do. I have a pretty big shed that I am going to build the trailer in but I didn't have any lights in the shed when I started the smoker. Plus with the cool weather we have been having I'm glad I was outside in the sun. My neighbors probably think I'm crazy but once they try the BBQ it will all make sense.
It is what I had. They are 6" Square tube from a light pole. I originally made the stacks that short because the volume is what was recommended from the feldon calculator. If that makes sense. I am going for the Franklin method plus the longer stacks do look nicer haha.