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The two wire connector is from the meat probe. I pulled it out so I could install my own sensor inside the smoker. I may switch back to using the probe on the back wall if I can figure out how to read it.
I wanted to follow up with an answer for anyone following this thread. The STOVE-T has 5V applied by the power board (shown above) that then runs through the thermostat and finally routed up to the control panel where it monitors this signal for open/close. From a quick test, the control panel beeps and kicks off the heating element relay when 5V is present indicating the thermostat closed due to an overheating condition. You can see the 2 pin header that runs out to the thermostat. By looking at the back of the power board one can see the STOVE-T and +5V signals (shown in pic above) are simply routed from/to the 5 pin header that routes to the control panel.
Hope this helps someone.
Actually I've got a mismatch of parts: the smoker itself has five + two pins. The original controller failed and I ended up with four pin controller that I haven't figured out how to connect.
@jr_ece thanks for clarifying the order.
I made my own simple controller with an Arduino and a thermocouple/max6675 board. No PID control, I need a bit of fluctuation to get smoke.
Actually I've got a mismatch of parts: the smoker itself has five + two pins. The original controller failed and I ended up with four pin controller that I haven't figured out how to connect.