It arrived late this morning. My impressions.
I put it together in more than three frustrating hours (fat old guy with arthritis and a recent heart attack). The instructions seem to assume that the new owner will assemble it on the ground. That’s was an awful idea for me. I was kneeling next to the grill on its side with one hand inside the burn area and the other on the outside while trying to align two holes to thread 6mm metric machine bolts through them. I padded my pickup tailgate for a driveway workbench.
There are times when–
- The instructions are vague (small components don't match the illustration)
- I changed the process (attaching the wheeled legs)
- Holes don't align (lid hinge in particular)
- It's a two-person task
I suggest that Rec Tec management pick some people from the general public who are part of their target customer group. Give them the box and say, "Put it together." Don't coach them; just watch, note the trouble areas and make the appropriate changes.
The holes on the legs are threaded for the machine bolts but the metal appears to be only 12 gauge (about 1/10â€) or 10 gauge at best. It doesn’t seem substantial.
The instructions say to burn it in at 150° for an hour. I set the knob at 9 O'Clock and it ran steady at 210° for more than an hour (based on the lid thermometer).
And it made a lot of smoke at 210°. It was mostly rather dense blue smoke that sometimes began to approach the white smoke I don't care for but I'd say it was all good smoke and a lot of it. I plan to use it mainly as a grill but I may smoke a butt or brisket just to see.
Burgers tomorrow. But before that I think I'll record (graph) the grate temperature when it's running at around 200°.