Time flies when you are having a good time, they say. I guess I'm having a blast. Since the last post I have been working steadily on my personal cook trailer. The frame is 2x3 rectangluar tube measuring 8' wide and 14' long on a 3,500 axle. It has the obligatory 40 gallon waste tank, 30 gallon fresh water tank, l/p water heater, three hole sink, and stainless steel shelving. Carrying two cookers it weighs in around 2,000 lbs without supplies or water. The smoker is a custom design between a Backwoods and an off set using a counter flow approach. Works extremely well with draft contral via Guru's Cyberque II. The five racks allows for two cases of spare ribs or 15 Boston Butts. The other cooker is a 275 gallon pork steak grill that will convert 85 pork steaks at one time into pig love at first bite everytime. The smoker is mounted at the rear and the grill at the front.
While working on the cook trailer a friend of mine from Boy Scouts called and wanted to talk about a grill at camp. More on that next time. Hope you all have a great christmas and have many memories of family, friends and new acquintances!
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Mr. McKinney's shop class
It's hard to imagine the impact that an eighth grade shop teacher would have on custom building BBQ grills and smokers. Mr. McKinney was my shop teacher with an enormous amount of patience for 13 years boys with power tools and sharp objects. With years of experience demonstrating over and over again the basics of tool education, rudimentary shop drawing, and a firm grasp of boy psychology he gave me the confidence to try anything once.
My father was a tinker of sorts with a basement full of boxes with screws, bolts, odd looking hand tools and of course that wonderful smell of old hardware. My grandfather had owned two hardware stores and hence passed many of his hand tools to my father. But the gift of curiosity and invention was a combination of Mr. McKinney's belief that "shop" taught you the importance of creativity and thinking ahead and my father's willingness to let me "build things" in the basement.
Over time, and probably more to the fact that I became smitten by any girl in high school, I detoured from the basement to the back seat of my mother's '64 Nova convertible. The itch to build something, anything, never left. It was like playing baseball on a dirt lot, I would rather tinker and engineer something than do almost anything else...except use mom's car.
The initial modest collection of tools grew and moved with me from town to town like a tinkers wagon. With each move the boxes of collected fasteners, tools, and sketches increased. When we moved from Centertown to Jefferson City they literally filled the entire box truck. We had rebuilt the old house in Centertown stripping most of the house to the studs for new drywall, insulation and new wiring. Then we relaid the kitchen floor joists, floor and hand built new cabinets. Always working in wood, trying to follow Mr. McKinney's advice of "think ahead and do it right".
Eventually we moved into a house with a big back yard, but with a garage full of tools. At an age when most would settle for the shop education they have, I had the gnawing urge to learn to weld. So off I went to adult night school to shop class once again, this time it was welding class 101. Somethings are taught, somethings are experienced, and somethings just become a magic event. It was like discovering girls in high school, the excitement of pooling metal and sparks was captivating. An electric glue gun with a serious attitude was the first thing that came to mind.
Not so much as a class project, but to put my learning to practice I decided to build a BBQ trailer pit. Having cooked a lot in Boy Scouts and doing BBQ fundraisers for our Troop with borrowed pits I had a pretty good idea of what worked and what didn't. That was nine years ago and the original trailer pit is still being used for large events. Since then I have custom built many grills, pits, and smokers that operate on the simple advice of Mr. McKinney, "think ahead, do it right". I hope you enjoy this site and look forward to hearing from you.
My father was a tinker of sorts with a basement full of boxes with screws, bolts, odd looking hand tools and of course that wonderful smell of old hardware. My grandfather had owned two hardware stores and hence passed many of his hand tools to my father. But the gift of curiosity and invention was a combination of Mr. McKinney's belief that "shop" taught you the importance of creativity and thinking ahead and my father's willingness to let me "build things" in the basement.
Over time, and probably more to the fact that I became smitten by any girl in high school, I detoured from the basement to the back seat of my mother's '64 Nova convertible. The itch to build something, anything, never left. It was like playing baseball on a dirt lot, I would rather tinker and engineer something than do almost anything else...except use mom's car.
The initial modest collection of tools grew and moved with me from town to town like a tinkers wagon. With each move the boxes of collected fasteners, tools, and sketches increased. When we moved from Centertown to Jefferson City they literally filled the entire box truck. We had rebuilt the old house in Centertown stripping most of the house to the studs for new drywall, insulation and new wiring. Then we relaid the kitchen floor joists, floor and hand built new cabinets. Always working in wood, trying to follow Mr. McKinney's advice of "think ahead and do it right".
Eventually we moved into a house with a big back yard, but with a garage full of tools. At an age when most would settle for the shop education they have, I had the gnawing urge to learn to weld. So off I went to adult night school to shop class once again, this time it was welding class 101. Somethings are taught, somethings are experienced, and somethings just become a magic event. It was like discovering girls in high school, the excitement of pooling metal and sparks was captivating. An electric glue gun with a serious attitude was the first thing that came to mind.
Not so much as a class project, but to put my learning to practice I decided to build a BBQ trailer pit. Having cooked a lot in Boy Scouts and doing BBQ fundraisers for our Troop with borrowed pits I had a pretty good idea of what worked and what didn't. That was nine years ago and the original trailer pit is still being used for large events. Since then I have custom built many grills, pits, and smokers that operate on the simple advice of Mr. McKinney, "think ahead, do it right". I hope you enjoy this site and look forward to hearing from you.
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