Without welding skills, I'm glad I didn't commit to an OK Joe.
Heh, well I have very limited welding skills too, as you can see from my photos, but with a little time and practice they are getting a little better, especially when I can use shielding gas. And I didn’t really
need to weld the firebox halves together or to the cook chamber. I mean, it worked perfectly well for 6 odd years just being bolted together. I’m probably only doing these things to stave off the big urge to buy some “over the top” smoker that would cost me a couple of thousand bucks before it cooked any meat.
From a value perspective the OK Joe was pretty good. The pit cost me less than $200. I’ve put another $150 or so in mods into it and it’s still working all this time later. It has been a good pit to learn stick burning on. Maybe more demanding than a big heavy gauge pit because you really have to regulate your fuel loading on such a lightweight pit.
Which brings me to the latest mod. Here’s a photo of the old “dryer vent” exhaust lowering configuration:
As you can see it extends fairly far into the limited width cook chamber. The Cook chamber on this OK Joe Highlander model is 18” in diameter and 35” long, so space is of a premium.
Now, here is the new LavaLock chimney lowering mod from bbqsmokermods.com.
As you can see, this rectangular extension protrudes far less into the cook chamber, and it is welded together out of reasonably thick steel that should last as long as the pit.
I got lucky that the new extension did not interfere with my silicone Weber temp probe port. Worth being aware of if you are ever thinking of doing a similar mod.
I like how low the outlet is now, and that it barely sticks out past the edge of the door opening. And before I installed it, I calculated the cross sectional area of the box (2” deep, 4.5” wide) is greater than that of the 3” diameter chimney pipe, and it is. So it should not cause any restriction more than the dryer vent did.