So I'm cooking with a newer style Longhorn, and have done all the standard mods and am having really good success, but this cold weather is killing me.
My last cook was in 40ish degree weather with some wind, so I knew I was going to burn a lot of wood to keep it hot enough. But one thing was happening that I wasn't expecting was getting a good draft out of the stack and causing me to have dirty smoke from the cold. Even with my temps around 250, I could easily wrap my hand around the stack and it was barely warm. I was even getting some creosote running back down the stack. I know the cold and wind is causing that, because I have a single wall stove pipe at deer camp and have been dealing with it for years.
I know its common to wrap the cook chamber to keep it warm, but has anyone tried a double wall or insulated stack? I'm thinking about wrapping it with a piece of welding blanket and then sliding a section of 4" stove pipe over the existing 3" stack. What do you think?
My last cook was in 40ish degree weather with some wind, so I knew I was going to burn a lot of wood to keep it hot enough. But one thing was happening that I wasn't expecting was getting a good draft out of the stack and causing me to have dirty smoke from the cold. Even with my temps around 250, I could easily wrap my hand around the stack and it was barely warm. I was even getting some creosote running back down the stack. I know the cold and wind is causing that, because I have a single wall stove pipe at deer camp and have been dealing with it for years.
I know its common to wrap the cook chamber to keep it warm, but has anyone tried a double wall or insulated stack? I'm thinking about wrapping it with a piece of welding blanket and then sliding a section of 4" stove pipe over the existing 3" stack. What do you think?