It's great to hear you got it fixed. And it's great to see the advice in this thread and others like it.
Others will hopefully stumble upon threads like this and benefit from them.
While all of this has been covered before, it never hurts for it all to be repeated.
I've said this all before and I'll say it again:
1. The MESs purposely use long heater cycle times to ignite their stock chip burners. As mentioned by
johnmeyer
above, if you replace the stock controller with something that gives more smooth, even heating, you will defeat one of the major design "features" of the MES, and you'll no longer get smoke from the stock chip and tray design.
2. As
Bearcarver
said: The stock chip and tray design doesn't work very well, even with the stock temperature controller. So most folks who've had their MES for a while, and especially, if they've run across this forum, will adopt a different smoke generator. I personally use one of the original AMAZN
AMNPS pellet trays, and it's night and day better than the OEM chip burner. Bear's right. If you stay with the stock chip burner, you really are a glutton for punishment! :)
3. As
tallbm
has pointed out, because the stock controller cycles the temperature so widely, there are certain types of cooking that are impossible with that stock controller. And as a lot of us know from our professional work, a PID controller can be the answer to getting optimum response to disturbances as well as initial temperature accuracy, etc.
But as
johnmeyer
points out: PIDs are non-trivial to program properly. Likely far beyond what most people want to fiddle with. So a simple "bang-bang" control may be all that's really necessary. We just want it to be accurate, and likely have less hysteresis than what the stock MES units have (to make their chip burners work).
4. The stock wiring and connections are not very good. And replacing things should be done with proper care and attention to detail. Heating elements, not surprisingly, get HOT! :) And that means that the connectors and wire near the elements need to be the right kinds, designed for this application. The lugs I've gotten for heating elements have been made of a nickel alloy, not copper. They retain their "springiness" even at high temperatures so they don't loosen up and cause the high contact resistances mentioned above by
johnmeyer
.
In my 40 years of electrical and electronics work, I can say that in my experience, at least 90% of all so-called "electrical" or "electronic" failures are bad contacts and connections. This is true even inside of fancy IC and power semiconductor packages, where lead-bond failures make up a surprisingly high percentage of field failures. This is why we always temperature cycled completed devices before sending them out to the field, and this reduced field failures by an enormous percentage. Temperature cycling roots out a LOT of marginal connections, especially within IC packages.
Mind the connections! :)
I'm in the same camp as
Bearcarver
. So far, my MES's stock controller has not failed. Nothing in my MES has failed, actually.
But I did get an
AMNPS pellet burner quite early on, and I've removed a lot of the stock "guts" of my MES40 and added some "air flow control" in the form of aluminum sheet to direct the airflow to my liking. So I only used the MES's stock chip burner a few times. I do NOT miss it!
When I get the time to play with it, or if the stock controller in my MES fails, I will implement a much fancier temperature control system. But for now, I use the stock controller and the not-so-stock smoke generator in the form of the
AMNPS.
Someday I may also add a mailbox setup. I already have the mailbox, but again, what I've got works well, so I haven't been motivated to put the time into the mailbox. I've been able to do cold smoking of cheese, and even butter using the
AMNPS inside of the smoker. But I do wait for it to be rather cold outside. With a mailbox, I could likely cold smoke at warmer ambient temperatures, of course!
So many projects. So little time!