A common and frustrating experience I was having was the wood directly over the firebox holes would ignite and smoke like mad, then the rest of the wood would sit there and do almost nothing. So in effect I was going from very thick and heavy smoke production, to almost nothing - not ideal in my opinion.
I started experimenting first with wood size and placement, but still had generally the same experience that I could either get charring away from the holes or torrential smoke on top of the holes.
Little by little I started adding extra holes to the fire box, as I didn't want to go to far and have to buy a new one right off the bat. After at least a half-dozen test smokes, and a few actual cooking smokes what I ended up with is below. I align my wood hunks so just a tiny bit is over the edge holes which are right above the element, and the rest is sitting above the middle holes which are further from the element and provide longer more consistent smoke production.
This probably won't be a popular modification and I'm sure people will mention never having issues with their stock firebox - but this change has made a huge difference for me, and if/when I burn out this firebox I'll do the same thing with the next. Figured I'd share since it was mentioned a few times and I'm finally at a finished state. Oh, I also do the ramp up like others have mentioned of setting at 175 for 30 min then going up to 225 from there - that's also made a big difference in regulating smoke production for the long term.
I started experimenting first with wood size and placement, but still had generally the same experience that I could either get charring away from the holes or torrential smoke on top of the holes.
Little by little I started adding extra holes to the fire box, as I didn't want to go to far and have to buy a new one right off the bat. After at least a half-dozen test smokes, and a few actual cooking smokes what I ended up with is below. I align my wood hunks so just a tiny bit is over the edge holes which are right above the element, and the rest is sitting above the middle holes which are further from the element and provide longer more consistent smoke production.
This probably won't be a popular modification and I'm sure people will mention never having issues with their stock firebox - but this change has made a huge difference for me, and if/when I burn out this firebox I'll do the same thing with the next. Figured I'd share since it was mentioned a few times and I'm finally at a finished state. Oh, I also do the ramp up like others have mentioned of setting at 175 for 30 min then going up to 225 from there - that's also made a big difference in regulating smoke production for the long term.
