I guess I don't understand how its possible to over smoke meat at temps of 200-250 degrees. If the primary fuel in a wood smoker is wood or wood pellets in a pellet smoker and you low and slow cook meat on either of those type of smokers you would by that token be over smoking meat every time you used it.
You can over smoke at lower temps and in my experience you can over smoke at lower temps much easier than over smoking at higher temps.
Remember, smoke can also be controlled by oxygen, less oxygen and more smoke, if you choke a fire too much and smolder a fire you may get nasty smoke.
My comment about a smoker full of wood smoldering at a low and slow temp was meant to present that only a minimal amount of smoke is going to be present in a 200-250 degree fire
Smoldering smoke is just that, you will get a lot of smoke from a smoldering fire and much of that may be unwanted smoke. as opposed to a fire burning 350-400+ degrees which is too hot, not low and slow and will dry out and ruin your meat in a smoking situation.
Again, this is not true. So you are saying that you get less smoke at lower temps?
To be honest I can control my smoke at either temp but find LESS smoke during higher temps.
In a basic bbq situation in a fire 200-250 degrees there just isn't enough smoke produced to ruin a pork shoulder,
packer brisket, full turkey or even multiple chickens.
Really?, if it's poor fire management you sure as heck can ruin a cook at those temps or any other temp for that matter. Unless you're cold smoking something the amount of smoke you are producing is going to be equivalent to the temperatures you are cooking with.
????? So you are saying the temperature dictates the amount of smoke, what about time, meat temperature and surface moisture???????? I cold smoke cheese at 50° with an A-MAZE-N smoker, so you are saying if I bump the temp up to 80° I will get more smoke.
I think I would get more smoke keeping it in thee smoker longer than messing with the temps.