I got my Bradley this past May. I've been storing it in a outdoor shed. Now that the weather is getting colder should I keep it indoors? Does anyone know if winter cold damages the smoker?
Thanks in advance for any advice!
I keep mine outside year round, Also in so calif though it is on a shelving unit and covered to be pretected from the elements,
depending on where you live and winter elements either cover it and if you have room in the garage ,,, move it in the garage
Beef
I'm in Iowa, and my smoker resides in a "Vertical Tool Shed" made by Suncast. Not heated or anything. I usually don't smoke when it's under 20*, mainly because I don't feel like putting a bunch of clothes on to go check on the progress, load the food, or bring the food in.
Thats a good question TB, I have mine inside my well house and plan on using it through the winter, now granted in my neck of the woods we don't have to many days below freezing but I would think as long as its protected from moisture you'll be OK. I'll let some of our northern friends give a more definitive answer!
C
Depending on your weather in the winter you may want to take the generator indoors. You can leave the tower outside providing it's covered. The generator has moving parts and firing it up in real cold temps would put added stress on it in my opinion. Some people have a plastic storage tub with a lid devoted to storing the generator in so that it keeps the smoke smell to a minimum. Just take the puck tube off to make it a little more compact. I'm in Canada and we frequently have -20 to -40 temps and wind in the winter so I have build mine into my heated garage but that's another storey.
Mike
Mine sits in my garage on top of a mobile tool chest just for the smoker. So I can wheel it out when I need it. I haven't had any problems as of yet, but like mentioned above I try not to start it if the temp is too cold.
I have the OBS for over 4 years, and it remains on my deck 24/7 with just a cover, and never had a problem due to cold weather. I live in upstate NY. The past 4 winters have been more mild them most, but we still get a few sub zero days, and the average overnight low in the dead of winter averages in the single digits.
If you keep your generator outdoors like I do, one thing I've learned let the cabinet heat up first for awhile before turning on the generator. This will warm the generator, and reduce any strain that cold parts can place on the mechanism.