Only the latch was plastic. Mailbox is metal.You are using a plastic mailbox??? That is a really bad idea, and a good way to get poisoned. Plastic will release fumes that will mix with the smoke.
As for "self-igniting" I assume you mean that it began to flame. It obviously is ignited, if it is smoking. Flames usually only happen when there is a LOT of air flow, meaning that there is a real breeze going over the pellets.
BTW, there is absolutely nothing magic about a mailbox, and there are far better enclosures. By better, I mean enclosures that are not painted, not plated (no zinc) and not containing plastic. Also, while the AMNPS width matches the width of a small mailbox, there is actually no advantage to that. The only thing that matters is that the AMNPS is able to fit inside.
I used a popcorn tin, but there are lots of other alternatives. If you end up building another enclosure, I encourage you to use something other than a mailbox, and to look for something that has a LOT more surface area than a mailbox. More surface area will condense more creosote, something that is really important to remove prior to the smoke going into the MES.
If it were me, I'd remove the plastic latch.Only the latch was plastic. Mailbox is metal.
PS flame up melted all the plastic![]()
BTW, there is absolutely nothing magic about a mailbox, and there are far better enclosures. By better, I mean enclosures that are not painted, not plated (no zinc) and not containing plastic. Also, while the AMNPS width matches the width of a small mailbox, there is actually no advantage to that. The only thing that matters is that the AMNPS is able to fit inside.
I used a popcorn tin, but there are lots of other alternatives. If you end up building another enclosure, I encourage you to use something other than a mailbox, and to look for something that has a LOT more surface area than a mailbox. More surface area will condense more creosote, something that is really important to remove prior to the smoke going into the MES.
I think it sounds like a great idea.I have been thinking about what you said and I think I might make me a "Smoke Box". I'm thinking about a box about 12" wide x 12" deep with vertical baffles alternating being attached to the top & the bottom making the smoke travel about 2 or 3 feet over & under the baffles before entering the MES opening. Do you think this will reduce the residual creosote from making it's way into the cooking chamber?
The high end on mine is towards the door .My smoke tube is due tomorrow and I'll do a U-bolt on one end. I'm thinking the "cant" should be upward from the burning end toward the flue?
Russ , nice work on the mailbox . Looks good .
The high end on mine is towards the door .
I put the pellets in and leave them a bit back from the open end . I don't pack them . I do add chips in with the pellets , but maybe you should try without first , so you know how it's gonna work .Do you pack the tube, or is it supposed to be loose? Also, I've got a bunch of chips left over from the MES box, can I add some throughout the tube w/o it going out?
Light the open end , like this .So, do you light the end towards the door?
Well, that was a flaming success, literally! The test burn went great, unattended smoke for 4 1/2 hrs. No fuss, no muss, had a pretty good scare though. I always leave my propane torch bottle unscrewed so there's no chance of leakage. So I'm on my knees (will be 67 in 4 weeks), tighten the bottle, light the torch with my striker, start roasting the pellets, and - whoof! Huge ball of flame rolls back in my face. I think,, WTF! did they soak these pellets in some kind of accelerant? I pull the torch out and the fireball comes with it - nope, not the pellets at all, but the torch. Tossed it on the ground, got the hose and put it out. Checked everything and it all seems good, so glove up and try it again. Same result. Apparently the packing around the valve is completely gone. Lucky just a small blister on my thumb and planning for a new torch...
Russ