Been stalking this site for a long time. Thank you for all the great ideas!
I lucked into a 1940 GE refrig for $50 on craigslist after months of looking. It took me a couple of weeks of clean up, disassemble, and paint removal, and clean some more. The unit was still cooling and had sulfur dioxide refrigerant which was tricky. It was brown, over green, over white. After getting down to bare metal - its is now its metallic red. This is now nearly complete after a month of off and on work. Put 7 shelves in. Still looking for racks that fit properly ( & that I like). I used Roxul insulation all the way around the smoke chamber and inside the door. The original insulation was cardboard. Afterburner C propane unit from Ampco in bottom. Got it up to 350 last night and dialed it down to 225 where it stayed for 2 hours & outside shell was cool to the touch. Smoke stack borrowed from a MasterForge smoker/grill at Lowes. Replaced plastic body and door liner with 16 gauge stainless steel. The top of the smokechamber is new 16 gauge stainless steel. (Got relatively cheap steel at speedymetals.com - check their firesale section and cross your fingers.) The rest of the box is porcelained steel. Used cheap graphite stove rope together with Red RTV silicone for the seal. 5 inch rubber casters from Grainger. For smoke I am trying the A Maze N Smoker first (simply due to price) - may get a smokedaddy at some point if I dont like the results with the Amazen - or if I get tired of using up space inside the smoke chamber. My new thermometer is on the way - & will crank it up to season it this weekend. I used the left over metal to build a shelf for my propane tank. Just need to mount a bottle opener and I'm set.
The multiple layers of old paint was so thick I wasnt even sure the badge was still on the unit.
The afterburner is barely visible. The heat dispersal plate is a large cookie sheet with bolts for legs. The ceramic briquettes are on a rock grate for added heat dispersal.
I lucked into a 1940 GE refrig for $50 on craigslist after months of looking. It took me a couple of weeks of clean up, disassemble, and paint removal, and clean some more. The unit was still cooling and had sulfur dioxide refrigerant which was tricky. It was brown, over green, over white. After getting down to bare metal - its is now its metallic red. This is now nearly complete after a month of off and on work. Put 7 shelves in. Still looking for racks that fit properly ( & that I like). I used Roxul insulation all the way around the smoke chamber and inside the door. The original insulation was cardboard. Afterburner C propane unit from Ampco in bottom. Got it up to 350 last night and dialed it down to 225 where it stayed for 2 hours & outside shell was cool to the touch. Smoke stack borrowed from a MasterForge smoker/grill at Lowes. Replaced plastic body and door liner with 16 gauge stainless steel. The top of the smokechamber is new 16 gauge stainless steel. (Got relatively cheap steel at speedymetals.com - check their firesale section and cross your fingers.) The rest of the box is porcelained steel. Used cheap graphite stove rope together with Red RTV silicone for the seal. 5 inch rubber casters from Grainger. For smoke I am trying the A Maze N Smoker first (simply due to price) - may get a smokedaddy at some point if I dont like the results with the Amazen - or if I get tired of using up space inside the smoke chamber. My new thermometer is on the way - & will crank it up to season it this weekend. I used the left over metal to build a shelf for my propane tank. Just need to mount a bottle opener and I'm set.
The multiple layers of old paint was so thick I wasnt even sure the badge was still on the unit.
The afterburner is barely visible. The heat dispersal plate is a large cookie sheet with bolts for legs. The ceramic briquettes are on a rock grate for added heat dispersal.