Looking for a Propane Burner

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Jim_C

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Original poster
★ Lifetime Premier ★
Feb 26, 2024
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SF Bay Area
We live in an area prone to outages on windy days. I have the grill and the smoker, but would like a propane burner. I know there are a bunch of folks on this forum who have experience with propane burners and I thought I'd ask for some advice.

I did buy a propane burner on Amazon. It's a single burner rated at 260,000 BTU. The reviews mention it runs more like 200,000. The burner is large. 16" square. I would not be able put anything smaller than an 8 quart pot on it. Although the 3-4 times a year I boil crab it would probably do one heck of a job, it just seems like overkill. I'm likely going to return it.

The size I think I'm after is more in the single burner 120,000 BTU range. The reviews for the ones I am looking at on Amazon suggest they actually run in the 20,000 - 40,000 range, which may be a bit small.

So......I'm after advice. Throwing out the BTU ratings and user reviews; What propane burner would be good for something dependable in adverse weather, small enough to use our daily cookware on, and hot enough to not leave me wishing I had something that sounds like a jet engine and would double as a flame thrower.
 
Long time homebrewer here and have had a number of these including the 200k BTU jet engine soot maker. 40k BTU "banjo" is much nicer, quieter and no soot. More than enigh heat for all but the largest of boils like 15G. I routinely sear stuff on it and use to heat my wok. It's not ideal but it works. I keep putting off making a stand for it.
 
here is what I did without breaking the bank. I do large seafood boils cook salsa , canning.
You have to increase gas flow. Red 20lb regulator. I already had a burner frame

All can be has on Amazon

RG

DOZYANT 4 Feet High Pressure... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01J63DYI6?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share

 
I have many.

I started with an "Outdoor Cooker" (now Camp Chef) 2 burner basically the same as Eric ( SmokinEdge SmokinEdge ) posted. What a work horse. I bought it for canning. Use it to boil bagels. Great with a larger skillet or a cast iron griddle. 30 years old and lived most of its life outside and still going strong. Coating is starting to peel in a few places.
If you want only 1 unit I highly recommend it as your "one and done" selection.

I also have a Coleman Roadtrip 2 burner that I got for RVing. I don't like cooking highly aromatic stuff such as bacon in the truck camper. Got griddles and a stove top rack for it. Not a high BTU unit for big pots, but is a great unit. I prefer the aluminum griddles over the cast iron.

I bought a Coleman party ball years ago. Compact unit that folds down. Starts with rack for pots. A grate goes over the top for grilling. I don't think they make it anymore.

I bought an outdoor deep fryer after my electric unit died. It is basically the unit Sam ( zwiller zwiller ) and radioguy radioguy talk about with a stand. Great burner, but I prefer the working height of the Camp Chef.
Look into the offerings from https://gasone.com/ as they are decent priced and have some flame thrower models as well. The flamethrower burners may not work well with a traditional 20#er tank. The over fill protection (OFP) valve standard on LP tanks may not support burners over 20-30K BTU. They have a built in safety to shutdown high gas flow.

I had a 2 burner white gas Coleman cook stove with a propane conversion similar to the unit Keith ( JckDanls 07 JckDanls 07 ) has in his arsenal. Had was a key word. I bought a replacement at a garage sale about 6 years ago. I love the white gas option as it is much hotter than using the propane conversion. White gas also works much better than propane in colder temps. Well shortly after the purchase I no longer freeze my tail off in cold winters.

I hope you got some ideas.
 
By what I am reading, a standard turkey fryer from bass pro or Atwoods might work for what I understanding your needs might be. I have two. Both I can put a small sauce pan pot on simmer for cheese sauce, or a small 8 in or bigger cast iron skillet, 17 in wok or the big boil pot to fry a turkey or do a shrimp or crab boil in. Don't know what size it is, but a 20 lb turkey will easily fit in it covered with oil. I have also put a camp chief cast iron griddle on it a few times.

As "radioguy" suggested above, and most important in my opinion is to get rid of fixed regulators that come with any of this kind of stuff and get a "red knob" adjustable 20 lb manual propane regulator from amazon, Lowes, home depot or even wal-mart so you can really adjust your flame heat to where you want it. I do that for all my outdoor burners. You can have an eighth inch flame for low heating sauces or a two inch blowtorch out of each little hole flame if you want to make the bottom of your pot red hot or anything in-between by just turning the knob.

Good Luck to you, report back of what you have found to work for you.
 
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