Propane Smoker in a Wood Enclosure/Smoke House

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2Pork Sha-cure

Newbie
Original poster
Jul 27, 2021
8
2
NE Ohio
Smoker_in_case.jpg


I have an outdoor wood fired pizza oven. Roughly 5 years ago I began building an wood enclosure "dog house" to keep the rain and snow off it. The residual moisture was causing it to crack. Making a long story short, I bailed on the project and have had a giant wooden dog house taking up space in my garage for 5 years.

I have a very basic cabinet propane smoker that I use pretty regularly. If isn't the best cooking device when the weather is cold or wet, and I live in Ohio so I get all 4 seasons. I had an epiphany a week or so ago that I could flip the dog house on its end, put doors and a back plane on it, and put my smoker inside. I put casters on the underside so it scoots around easily. I was hoping someone might have tried something similar and save me from making some mistakes as I move to the next steps. My questions/comments are -

* The "roof" isn't sloped, so even if I seal it with a decent stain/paint it'll probably let water pool and might be a problem. You think so too?
* Do I need to install a chimney? I assume, yes. If so, will I need to cut into the smoker cabinet to mount it? There seem to be a lot of right angle chimney options available, but not so many vertical ones.
* I'm not sure I need to insulate the inside? The wood is pretty thick and it seems it should be a good insulator on its own?

If anyone had any thoughts on how to make this a functional smokehouse I'd be grateful for the input!
 
Good idea to repurpose the box. Should help keep temps steady in the winter winds for sure. Where is the vent on the smoker? Not sure a chimney is a must, but smoke needs to escape somehow. Either a hole, chimney or removable roof? Put a hinge on the roof so you can open it a few inches for exhaust? If the smoker ever has a flame out, propane accumulating inside the box is a concern.
 
Your also gonna need an intake vent as the propane burner needs oxygen to mix with the propane for a clean burn If your going to close the smokehouse up tight while cooking...
 
Good idea to repurpose the box. Should help keep temps steady in the winter winds for sure. Where is the vent on the smoker? Not sure a chimney is a must, but smoke needs to escape somehow. Either a hole, chimney or removable roof? Put a hinge on the roof so you can open it a few inches for exhaust? If the smoker ever has a flame out, propane accumulating inside the box is a concern.
Thanks for your thoughts. I appreciate it.

There is a rotating disk-type vent on the top-center of the cabinet. If I cut a hole in the wood above it I can probably drop a pipe in it, with a top cover. I'll just need to find one with a damper. I think a hinge would be a lot of work (sawing) now that it's all screwed together. Would have been a good idea 5 years ago though. :-)
 
Your also gonna need an intake vent as the propane burner needs oxygen to mix with the propane for a clean burn If your going to close the smokehouse up tight while cooking...
Good point. I'll put a screened hole at the bottom. Maybe 2.5" diameter?
 
Propane/LNG + enclosed space = bad idea.
Many of these units don’t have a thermocouple to shut off the gas if the flame goes out. Inside of a box, well you can imagine the rest. Get the right fuel/air mixture, relight it, and it could level your house.
 
Thanks for your thoughts. I appreciate it.

There is a rotating disk-type vent on the top-center of the cabinet. If I cut a hole in the wood above it I can probably drop a pipe in it, with a top cover. I'll just need to find one with a damper. I think a hinge would be a lot of work (sawing) now that it's all screwed together. Would have been a good idea 5 years ago though. :-)
I am considering a box around my upright smoker to stabilize the temperature swings in the winter and for those breezy days.

On my upright I removed the top vent cover/adjuster and run the top vent wide-open. The two vent holes on the top are so small they don't do much to help regulate things.

I stack a piece for 6" x 24" duct pipe over the hole. The stuff you buy in flat at the hardware store and push the seams together. I don't even bother to bolt it down. I sit it on top. I could drive a sheet metal screw or two I guess. You could drill a 6" hole in your box and stick the pipe through.
 
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I am very happy with my upright propane smoker.

Here's my two cents on upright propane smokers being bombs in the waiting on flame-out. True.

If there is a flame-out and there are embers in the wood tray you have a bomb on your hands waiting for oxygen......like opening the door.

In my mind the equation doesn't change much building a box around it, as long as the front of the box remains open. No doors on the front of the box.

I would be fine running my upright propane smoker as you have it in the picture. Even with a closed in back. As long as the front remains open and a 6" stack is in place on top.

Aside from that, use common sense when you have a flame-out on a propane smoker and shut the valve until things air-out a little.
 
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Thanks for offering your thoughts. I'm kicking around doing something as you've proposed. I may create a 4-door front, where 2 top doors are smaller (maybe 25% of the area). And the bottom two are 75%. I'd run the smoker with the top ones open. This might provide sufficient shielding from the elements while in use, and enough ventilation in the event of a burner fault. I would probably also drill a couple 2" holes in the bottom sides, with a metal screen (to keep animals out). Since propane is heavier than air they'd provide an exit path for the gas.
 
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