I have two smokers and I'm getting pretty good at it. They are both Brinkman barrel-style, one is electric, the other is charcoal. I also used to own a New Braunfels side-box traditional smoker, but sold it when I got the charcoal because it was so labor-intensive tending the fire.
I procured this thing. (picture won't load over slow internet) It is a well water pressure/bladder tank, but for a large commercial application. It is probably 5' tall and 30" in diameter. I want to make it a smoker. Help me engineer it.
Charcoal: Pros - flavor, light it and walk away, cheap fuel. Cons - might be hard to get the right airflow to maintain proper burn and temperature.
Electric: Pros - plug it in and walk away, ability to use a thermostat to set whatever temp I want. Cons - expensive heat (relatively), not a "respected" fuel source for "real" smoking.
Gas: Pros - light it and walk away, ability to use a thermostat, burning propane releases plenty of water vapor, so no water pan needed. Cons - running out of propane half way through a cook, more expensive/difficult to engineer a thermostat/pilot/ignition system.
Is it just me, or does that pros/cons list look like I need to do electric and get over the fact that it isn't "real fuel?"
If it is electric, I suppose I don't need much venting. Maybe just a 1" hole at the top? How much wattage of heating element will I need to have the option of going to, say, 300F?
I will do a side door instead of a removable top. That is the big gripe I have about my Brinkmans is that you have to access the meat from the top, and the lower grate being right above the water tank doesn't get much heat or smoke. I'll probably measure the circumference and make the door about 1/3 of it. Then I can weld in little tabs for grates and maybe some pockets to hang rods for sausages