Chimney question

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gusibole
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Chimney question

Post by gusibole » November 8th, 2011, 6:06 pm

First build, reverse flow smoker. I have a length for the chimney, should it be saddle welded to to top or should it protrude into the smoke chamber? If so how far?

Thaknx

GUS


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Re: Chimney question

Post by Gizmo » November 8th, 2011, 7:46 pm

Check out some excellent discussion on pitbull8151's thread about that on page 3 of his thread starting with k.a.m.'s comments... forgot the name of the thread - sorry - got oldtimers disease... :)


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Re: Chimney question

Post by k.a.m. » November 8th, 2011, 7:47 pm

GUS, I prefer my stacks to be at the top. I either saddle or cut the hole to just slip in which ever fits my need at the time. I hope this helps. :)



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Re: Chimney question

Post by Frank_Cox » November 8th, 2011, 8:57 pm

What KAM said...
However I did have a conversation the other day with a guy about his build. He was goin to use a chunk of 4" truck exhaust pipe for his stack. I recommended he did not let the stack go into his cooker but instead to saddle weld it on since the pipe he was using was galvanized. It prolly wouldnt hurt anything but I wouldn't want to take the chance! Galvanized pipe puts off some nasty gases when heated up.

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Re: Chimney question

Post by gusibole » November 8th, 2011, 10:14 pm

No, I fully agree, heat and galvanized pipe is NOT a good combination>


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Re: Chimney question

Post by gusibole » November 9th, 2011, 5:43 pm

Thanks all!


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Re: Chimney question

Post by Frank_Cox » November 9th, 2011, 6:59 pm

No problem buddy that's what we are here for! :mrgreen:



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Re: Chimney question

Post by maccas66 » January 10th, 2012, 1:58 am

Frank_Cox wrote:What KAM said...
However I did have a conversation the other day with a guy about his build. He was goin to use a chunk of 4" truck exhaust pipe for his stack. I recommended he did not let the stack go into his cooker but instead to saddle weld it on since the pipe he was using was galvanized. It prolly wouldnt hurt anything but I wouldn't want to take the chance! Galvanized pipe puts off some nasty gases when heated up.

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Thanks! that just answered my question I was about to ask!, I knew it wasn`t any good as a fire grate.................


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