The first 380 was not the same (not aluminum body)and was replaced by this model. It did not have PID control, just had a temp knob in 25* increments. Temps were not well controlled and had lots of grease fires. Just communicated with P. Millen and he was looking for more smoke flavor and was disappointed, so he sold it. I find that in Lo mode this puts out lots of smoke. But have come to the conclusion, that pellets won't produce the same smoke flavor as stick pits. Probably because grinding wood into sawdust allows many other volatile substances to evaporate from the finished product. I suspect that those substances contribute to smoke that contributes the stronger flavor. Not sure but is IMO. I use Lumberjack pellets which have both the outer cambium layer and the bark included. I think I get more smoke flavor that way but is hard to be sure. However, for hot and fast cooks, this pit is ideal. Just finished a patty melt meal. Set the temp for 450* as that seems to be plenty for burgers. Had great results. Have not done a low/slow cook yet but not really interested in using 380 for that. Have seen several low slows on You Tube, and in the hands of the right people, they looked and were reported great. They all placed a disposable aluminum drip pan under the grates with some water in it. Results--no grease fires. One fellow did a 15 hour pork butt (12 hrs at 225) then wrapped, and into a cooler for 2-3 hrs. It looked black when finished but was not burnt, and he shredded it with his hands in about 30 seconds, and it was moist and reported a winner by his two daughters (in buns).
I might say that there are some very untalented contributors to YouTube who think they are master chefs, and one in particular that made so many mistakes on his 380, that RT gave him a full refund (perhaps to get him from further embarrassment). I plan to keep mine but will report any problems. It sure is easy to use and clean up!! I find that the fire pot keeps the ash down low enough that the lower air holes are completely open, so while ash accumulates in the bottom of the chamber, you won't have to vacuum frequently. However, after a low/slow with fatty meat, I would always clean the greasy bottom before any high temp cook.