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Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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I have a Sam's Club SS 3-burner grill that operates on natural gas.
It's 4 years old and is used almost daily for cooking. The three burners are H-shaped cast iron, and above them are flat ceramic plates for "flame taming." The grill was and is an excellent value and has served me well. However, over the past year or so, I began to notice that the grill didn't seem to heat up as quickly as I remembered and it took longer to grill a chop or about anything else for that matter. I also noticed that the "sweet spots" I had identified was being hotter or cooler than other spots were changed, had moved or were non existent anymore. With that in mind, I decided it was time for some exploratory surgery and a darned good cleaning. My first step was the old faithful trick of covering the bar grates with heavy duty aluminum foil and running the three burners on high for 30-45 minutes. The foil concentrates and reflects the heat back downward, turning any food and charred things to a gray ash. This was then vacuumed away and the grates and flame tamers removed. I wire brushed the tub interior and vacuumed everything that came loose and hadn't been reduced already to ash. The three burners were held in place with pins that extended through a bracket (probably for shipping), and were removed with wire cutters. When I lifted the first burner out, I immediately found what I'd suspected: about 2/3 of the holes in the sides of the burner were clogged, plugged or obstructed. Presumably, this was from drippings that made it through the flame tamers and hit just right on the burner, from the manufacturer not getting all the casting sand out or from the cast iron corroding and swelling. I took the three burners to my shop and measured the holes in the least used and least obstructed one. Then, I chucked a drill bit in my DeWalt drill, rolled up a comfortable chair, put on my safety goggles and started drilling out the holes. My god, are there a lot of holes and some are very difficult to reach. Those, got a hand "picking" with a piece of wire. The completed burners were then taken out back and blown out with 175 psi compressed air until they were clean as a whistle inside. I reassembled the grill and can report that it's working perfectly. In all, I used up about a half day, and the result was a grill that has a more even temperature now across the grates than I recall having when it was new. I attribute that to having round, perfectly formed holes in the burners, now, rather than "dents" created by just casting the holes. If your old grill is acting like mine was, I really recommend investing some time and giving my solution a try. -- ---Nonnymus--- TINSTAAFL There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch |
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