500 gallon Cookers and Grills 12' 'restaraunt' model...
So, I'm in the process of restoring this old trailer, and have gotten to the part I dreaded the most: The reverse flow plate got warped fairly badly when I first got this thing. A hot grease fire later, and now there is a nice dome in front of the fire entrance to the cook chamber. It wouldn't be a big deal, except that this caused the plate to come away from the sides of the tank where it's domed, and now we're getting major temp spikes over there. I fixed it by stuffing wads of aluminum foil in there to make a gasket of sorts, and that was all still in there when I just cleaned the tank all out so I could try to tackle this little job.
I blocked up a bottle jack just now, and got it to push the plate back to flat without too much trouble by pushing down from the top of the tank.. My brain says 'just heat it with torches while it's jacked back into place, then let it cool while you keep pressure on it'. That's great, except that my brain is forgetting that I no longer have access to torches.
I do have a 110V MIG machine here, and kinda thought about just tacking it down while it's jacked there.. It's a 6 ton bottle jack, and it's got quite a bit of pressure on it.
I don't want to do that, something tells me if I ever sell this thing, the next owner thanks me for not doing that. Especially if they ever need to replace that plate due to rust, or more major warping. It's only warped by a couple inches, but the poor person holding that grinder probably says it still hurt when it let go and cut their fingers off or something...
It seems that welding a piece of round rod, angle iron, something like that to the plate while it's jacked down there is my best option short of heat straightening this warped plate.
So, if anyone has any ideas about how to force this thing to stay straight that sounds better than adding more obstacles to the plate to scrape grease around... I'd love to hear them. And yes, I've already considered fighting grease fires with bigger grease fires, by emptying all this cleaned up grease into a pile in there, and then lighting it.
Thanks!
edit for the added pics.
So, I'm in the process of restoring this old trailer, and have gotten to the part I dreaded the most: The reverse flow plate got warped fairly badly when I first got this thing. A hot grease fire later, and now there is a nice dome in front of the fire entrance to the cook chamber. It wouldn't be a big deal, except that this caused the plate to come away from the sides of the tank where it's domed, and now we're getting major temp spikes over there. I fixed it by stuffing wads of aluminum foil in there to make a gasket of sorts, and that was all still in there when I just cleaned the tank all out so I could try to tackle this little job.
I blocked up a bottle jack just now, and got it to push the plate back to flat without too much trouble by pushing down from the top of the tank.. My brain says 'just heat it with torches while it's jacked back into place, then let it cool while you keep pressure on it'. That's great, except that my brain is forgetting that I no longer have access to torches.
I do have a 110V MIG machine here, and kinda thought about just tacking it down while it's jacked there.. It's a 6 ton bottle jack, and it's got quite a bit of pressure on it.
I don't want to do that, something tells me if I ever sell this thing, the next owner thanks me for not doing that. Especially if they ever need to replace that plate due to rust, or more major warping. It's only warped by a couple inches, but the poor person holding that grinder probably says it still hurt when it let go and cut their fingers off or something...
It seems that welding a piece of round rod, angle iron, something like that to the plate while it's jacked down there is my best option short of heat straightening this warped plate.
So, if anyone has any ideas about how to force this thing to stay straight that sounds better than adding more obstacles to the plate to scrape grease around... I'd love to hear them. And yes, I've already considered fighting grease fires with bigger grease fires, by emptying all this cleaned up grease into a pile in there, and then lighting it.
Thanks!
edit for the added pics.
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