BBQ Buyer's Guide to Stainless Steel Charcoal Grills

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • Are you interested in stainless steel charcoal grills? Ever since Bradley Robinson released the Chud Grill, the question has arisen - what competitors are there in this section of bbq pits? This video has the answers!
    Chapter Times
    00:00 Opening
    00:37 Beginning Notes
    01:43 Napoleon Grills
    04:14 Wilmington Grill Company
    07:19 Hasty Bake Grills
    14:44 Chuds BBQ
    17:19 Bull BBQ
    18:04 Blaze Grills
    19:58 Coyote Grills
    21:21 Pitts and Spitts
    23:05 Price
    23:43 Inches Squared Main
    24:19 Inches Squared All
    24:38 $/in2 Main
    25:04 $/in2 All
    25:22 Two Important Factors
    27:32 My Thoughts
    29:13 Outro
    The Grills Featured in this episode:
    Napoleon PROFESSIONAL 605 CHARCOAL CART
    Wilmington Charcoal Grill 30"
    Hasty Bake Suburban 415 - Stainless Steel
    Chud Grill
    Wilmington Charcoal Grill 36"
    Hasty Bake The Legacy - Model 132 - Stainless Steel
    Bull BBQ Premium Bison 30-Inch Freestanding Stainless Steel Charcoal Grill
    Blaze 32-Inch Stainless Steel Charcoal Grill w/ Adjustable Charcoal Tray
    Hasty Bake The Gourmet PRO - Model 259 - Full Stainless Steel
    Coyote 36" Charcoal Grill With Cart - C1CH36+C1CH36CT
    Hasty Bake 357 PRO - Full Stainless Steel Dual Insulated - Professional Series
    Pitts and Spitts STAINLESS STEEL FLATTOP ADJUSTABLE CHARCOAL GRILL

Комментарии • 11

  • @waynec3121
    @waynec3121 6 дней назад

    First of all Thank You for all your work on these projects.I agree with your pick of Hasty Bake and Pitts and Spitts being true charcoal burners

  • @lamarwilliams185
    @lamarwilliams185 5 дней назад

    I’m pretty sure the custom grills can add a hole for a bbq guru. I don’t know why they never think of this. If it can be used as a smoker? Then they design the air intake holes in a way that you can not use a bbq guru. Some how they thought of temperature probes. If you bbq? You know those days when everything was set right. You walked away. When you came back. Fire went out. The temp is too high. The temp outside changed and you have to readjust. Charcoal used did not burn even or faster than expected. Etc.,..

  • @AntonioRosso
    @AntonioRosso 6 дней назад

    M36-S MOAG, M1-S

  • @Isovapor
    @Isovapor 5 дней назад +1

    I wouldn’t purchase any grill or smoker in stainless steel. It doesn’t rust is the only thing going for it. It is the worst metal to keep clean and looking good. It shows fingerprints demonstrating that it is horrible for grease and cooking. I’d choose painted black metal where I touch up the tiny rust spots with high heat paint and 3 cents worth of sandpaper. Save your money and headaches! Cheers!

    • @SmokeMasterD
      @SmokeMasterD  5 дней назад +1

      Interesting viewpoint. I'd never thought of it like that before.

    • @keneric
      @keneric 5 дней назад

      That's fine and dandy for the outside of the cooker but as everyone knows the internals of a high heat regular steel charcoal grill will soon turn into a rust bucket without copious amounts of anti-rust maintenance. Barbecue sauces and any type of vinegar based spray is like acid on those grills and needs to be completely cleaned up right after you cook. And then there's the ability of leaving your cooker in the rain or just hosing it down and power washing it to make the inside look like new. It all comes down to the amount of maintenance. I'd rather spend my time cooking. Along with many different types of cookers, I own a Pitts and Spitts offset in all stainless and one in painted carbon steel. I don't have to do anything to the stainless but my carbon steel cookers required hundreds of hours of maintenance and hundreds of dollars in Pam cooking spray over the years to keep them from rusting away. Now if you're talking about a big thick heavy duty smoker then go ahead and let it rust, it actually looks pretty nice. But all the thin regular steel metal charcoal grills will rust away in a few years with any regular use, but the stainless ones will keep on truckin' with little to no maintenance.

    • @Isovapor
      @Isovapor 4 дня назад +1

      @@keneric great point but I hate stainless steel which should be called stainful steel. I have stainless cookers outside and they look the worst. It would take 30 years for a piece of painted steel to rust through with proper care. You live in a humid environment and can’t manage carbon steel. Thats what you just told me! Up your cooking game! Cheers!

    • @keneric
      @keneric 3 дня назад

      ​@@IsovaporYou are talking about a piece of painted steel!? I am talking about the inside of a charcoal grill that sees upwards of a thousand plus degrees where the charcoal meets the metal. Show me the inside of a carbon steel charcoal grill that has lasted 30 years with regular use. We're all waiting.
      😂😂
      Your other assumptions are also completely wrong. But I get what you're saying about what's important to you. You're more worried about polishing up dainty little fingerprint marks, degreasing some food stains using the the latest high end biodegradable cleaners and touching up specs of micro rust all over your cooker using paint covered q-tips, rather than actually making good food. Explain no more! Got to keep them looking good for when your neighbors come over for that tough and dry brisket. So if you actually buy a stainless steel cooker that actually doesn't come from a big box store and doesn't have cheap Chinese 403 stainless steel or worse, all you need is a wet paper towel to keep it looking like new, I think it should tick all your check boxes above. You need to up your maintenance game.

    • @ants8632
      @ants8632 2 дня назад +1

      I have a Weber gas burner in stainless I clean with a STAINLESS STEEL CLEANER/POLISH that has kept the outside metal looking nice over the last almost 10 years.