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Owned by Clinton

BBQ Smoker Builders Community is a community focused on helping members design and build their own BBQ Smoker and Grills.

Memberships

Smoke, Flow & Grow

313 members • Free

Low & Slow BBQ/Smoking Group

112 members • Free

Texas Backyard BBQ and More

36 members • Free

Backyard SmokeMaster Society

78 members • Free

Real BBQ by Big Poppa

57 members • Free

Skoolers

192.7k members • Free

3 contributions to Real BBQ by Big Poppa
The Case for Tuning Plates
If you are a perfectionist who wants the cook chamber to be within 5 degrees from end-to-end, tuning plates are superior. They consist of several individual steel slats that you can slide closer together or further apart.
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Cleaning A BBQ Smoker
Cleaning a BBQ smoker is essential for maintaining food safety and preventing off-flavors from rancid grease or heavy creosote buildup. Goal— Deep clean a BBQ smoker to remove grease, carbon, and ash. 1. Wait for the smoker to cool completely before starting the cleaning process. 2. Remove all internal components, including grill grates, water pans, and heat deflectors. 3. Scrape the grates with a wire brush or wooden scraper to remove stuck-on food and carbon. 4. Scrub the grates and water pan using warm, soapy water and a nylon scouring pad, then rinse and dry them thoroughly. 5. Scrape the interior walls and lid with a plastic putty knife to remove flaky carbon buildup (creosote). 6. Vacuum out the cold ash and debris from the firebox and the bottom of the cooking chamber using a shop vac. 7. Wipe down the interior with a damp cloth; avoid using harsh degreasers on the inside to preserve the "seasoned" surface. 8. Clean the exterior with a dedicated stainless steel cleaner or warm soapy water to prevent rust. 9. Reassemble the smoker and apply a thin coat of high-smoke-point oil (like canola or grapeseed) to the grates to prevent corrosion. [tip] For stubborn grease on grates, place them in a large trash bag with a cup of ammonia overnight; the fumes will break down the burnt-on gunk without scrubbing. What type of smoker are you cleaning (e.g., Offset, Pellet, Electric, or Weber Smoky Mountain)?
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Roll Call: Introduce Yourself + Your BBQ Journey
Welcome to the pit! This crew is about real cooks, real wins, and real help—whether you’re comp-tested or backyard-bold. Kick things off by introducing yourself and sharing where you’re at, what you’re cooking, and what you want from this community. No gatekeeping, no ego—just results and a few laughs along the way. Drop your intro with: - Name & where you cook (city/backyard/comp team) - Cooker lineup (pellet, drum, kettle, gasser, offset—list ’em) - Signature win (your best cook) & most helpful fail (what it taught you) - Current goal (e.g., juicier chicken, rib color, brisket timing) - What you want here (tips, recipes, gear talk, accountability, honest feedback) Pic of your setup or a recent plate earns extra high-fives. Tag it #RealBBQRealResults so we can follow your progress. Let’s build something tasty together.
Roll Call: Introduce Yourself + Your BBQ Journey
1 like • 4h
Thank you for the add.
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Clinton Parker
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4points to level up
@clinton-parker-8767
I am a metal fabricator with over 20yrs experience. I build BBQ Smokers and Grills. I help people turn their desire to build their own smoker.

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Joined Apr 30, 2026
Hammond, IN