Add rotisserie to older Masterbuilt 40"

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drewb0y

Fire Starter
Original poster
Jul 5, 2020
36
13
So I was thinking of getting one of the add on rotisserie kits designed for the later model MES smokers and making it work with mine.

Cabela's has them for $24 right now. https://www.basspro.com/shop/en/masterbuilt-rotisserie-kit

Has anyone attempted such a surgery before? Seems like it would just take drilling a hole in one side, figuring out a way to mount and power the motor on the outside part, and fabricating a bracket for the other side.

Any suggestions would be welcome!

20201229_081434_copy_747x1105.jpg
 
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Hope you have good luck with that

I did surgery on my MB, It was called throw it in the trash.
 
One other person started a thread on this years ago but never reviewed it to let us know if it was worthwhile. Unless you have a broiling element and the modified ceiling to handle the heat, otherwise it's so low and slow at 275 max there's no need to spin the meat to keep it from burning at higher temps. Unless your going to put a pan and grate for charcoal on the bottom rack but the foam insulation in the smoker starts to degrade and burn so the max temp is 275. Lots of people have crunchy insulation in the right rear corner from the close proximity of the element. It sounds good but if just using the Mes element it may not make any difference. Since different temps from left to right. Now a motorized lazy susan grate would be even cooking. Lol
 
Rotisserie in any vertical smoker is a challenge. Thick walls, like on an electric MES, makes it even harder.

Ideally you center your meat on a rod, secure the pointed supports, then easily place the whole thing, in a single horizontal motion, into slots for final balance and rotation...works great on a wide gas grill or weber kettle.

But with a vertical, unless you want to cut slots on both sides from the front to the center, you're dealing with holes so there's no single horizontal entry path. Hence you you can't tighten down the meat supports since you have to bring it in at an angle with meat slid to the extreme end (if it had a handle, you needed to remove it by now and shorten that rod as much as possible) feed it through your "axle end" (requiring the hole be large enough to accommodate this insertion angle), then once it's in that one side, you slide the meat to the center while you feed the drive end of the rod through the OTHER side hole (needn't be as oversized) on the motor side. THEN you have to secure the meat supports and tighten any bushings that keep the rod in place during rotation.

If you have any rub or sauce on your meat, this process is even more slippery and messy. And it's harder to do in gloves. Also don't try this with the cooker at temp, unless you're well-practiced.

Unlike most grill cooks, smokers tend to use wired probes (even if they plug into a "wireless" base station) to watch internal temps...uh, that doesn't work with a rotisserie. So you'll end up using the old curves showing time to cook per pound of meat for various oven temps. Err conservatively. It's easier to add more heat than to take it away.

There are one or two fully-wireless temp probes that I'd love to try but they cost more than the rotisserie. I suspect you'll need to tie them on to keep from falling out.

So it's doable but difficult to add a rotisserie to a smoker. The exception would be a pellet grill, unfortunately I bought a vertical pellet smoker so I have the same problems as a MES.

So I've personally found it much easier to add smoke to my gas grill with a rotisserie than it was to add the rotisserie to a vertical smoker.
 
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