If I'm not mistaken, the MES you used in that other comparison was a Generation #2 MES. Generally speaking, that smoker is not worthy of being compared to anything other than a cardboard box. IMHO
The charcoal vs. electric comparison has been looked at before.
http://www.smokingmeatforums.com/t/...rcoal-vs-electric-and-pellet-with-pulled-pork
In this case, it was a mini-WSM vs the Masterbuilt 40. The meat was pulled pork. Cooked at the same time, with the same rub, at the same temperatures.
Egg-type (kamado) cookers can be tough to get dialed in. On another site, there are multiple pages of techniques to optimally achieve an ideal temperature for smoking. However, owners of the egg, who have them dialed in, rave about the temperature stability. The weber smokey mountain models appear to be easier to get dialed in.
Part of what makes an egg harder to get dialed in is it's excellent insulation and huge thermal mass. It requires a smaller amount of heat (than a WSM) to maintain a temperature; at very low temperatures (fish) some struggle with choking their fire out. However, the high thermal mass of an egg makes adjustments in air supply slower to show up. This leads many users of the egg to initially do a lot of temperature chasing. Every egg owner has a "sacred technique" to achieve low-and-slow on their egg.
All that said, I have a Akorn kamado smoker in-transit as we speak. I am also considering picking up a 13 inch ceramic egg for camping as well.
The first thing you mentioned was a 30* swing. I don't have that in mine. What mod fixes that?
BearCarver,
It is a Gen II. It has had all the good mods done to it, such as the mailbox mod and the AmazeN product line goodies added to it. If the comparison was stock, I would jump on your bandwagon. It's competitor was a home-made mini-WSM. The comparison was far from unfair.
A modified Gen II (and not a factory lemon) will go toe to toe with a Gen one MES. If you have one of the buggy Gen II smokers, then a Gen I unit will stomp it into the dirt. I got lucky, other than the built-in meat probe giving unreliable temperature, it works well (with the mods). Before the mods, I didn't care for how well it smoked; being tethered to the unit and feeding the chip tray was a pain.
I tested one with nothing but problems, but that's not my problem.
If I can find a gen one, I will characterize it as well. All electrical smokers, unless they have an external heat control unit (which provides a continuously varying voltage), have some swing in temperature. You just have to look for it. If you look at the posting that number was based upon, it was with no water pan, and no meat in the cabinet. I wanted to see the worst-case maximum swing, which was measured under the least desirable conditions. I am with you on your admiration of Gen One MES, it typically does not need mods to work well. A properly modified Gen II is not a bad box, but it certainly has a bad reputation. People who get a bad one, scream loudly. Those which have a good functioning one, spend their time smoking with it, instead of screaming. As such, you will see more sad postings than happy postings. This is normal on any product. You seem to have very strong feelings about this; did you have some bad experiences with a Gen II?
I took a BBQ class and two things I learned about the BGE taught me one wouldn't work for me. 1. It won't go below 275*. 2. After you light it, you have to "burp" before fully taking the cover off or you'll get a headful of high temp flames shooting up out of the top. I know guys who love their BGE but I'm very happy with my MES 30.
Does anybody have a big green egg or grill dome and either a smokey mountain cooker a or a MES? I have the last two and am wondering if a BGE or GD cooks better 'Q than the other two. I know you can do baking, grilling and the like on the BGE, but is it worth the money to cook better 'Q? They sure look nice, but I can't decide if I really want or need one. What do you think?