Baffles
There are two kinds of baffles:
• directional baffles
• safety baffles
A directional baffle is a solid metal plate whose purpose is to direct
heat and flames into a specified direction. The directional baffles
could be installed vertically, horizontally or a combination of the two.
Directional baffles are used most often in wood stoves. Directional
baffles are presented in the chapter on fire pits.
A safety baffle, commonly used in one unit smokers, is a perforated
metal plate that separates the firepit from the meat compartment and its
main purpose is preventing flames from reaching the smoke chamber.
Better designs advocate the use of two or three baffle plates separated
by 3 - 4 inches, though that complicates the smokers construction and
steals the valuable space.
Baffles are a very important design feature of any small smoker with a
firepit located in its bottom part as they safeguard products from
flames and wild jumps of temperature. They provide a piece of mind when
smoking making the entire process more organized and controlable and
they also help to disperse smoke slowly and evenly to all parts of the
smoking chamber. If a smoker is connected by a pipe with a separately
standing fire pit, the baffles are not necessary.
Meat hangs in different sections of the chamber but the smoke pouring out
of the pipe, or the one raising up from the fire pit is using the path
with the least resistance and that means it is rushing straight up. A
baffle puts some brakes on the smoke forcing it to slow down and
disperse evenly in all sections of the drum. During cooking the baffles
will slow down the heat escaping straight up and the design of the
smoker will be more efficient.
A baffle is a perforated metal plate, rectangular or round, of about
1/8” (3 mm) thickness or more, strong enough to support the weight of
river gravel or another baffle. Its diameter should be about 2” (5 cm)
smaller than the diameter inside of a barrel to facilitate removal for
cleaning. The holes between ½ - 1” ( 12 – 25 mm) diameter should be
drilled at random so if the two baffles are used, there will be some
offset between holes for better smoke distribution.
The smoker will work even better when a second baffle is installed. The
bottom baffle will rest freely on three right angle metal supports
secured to the barrel with bolts and nuts and positioned every 120
degrees. The top baffle will also rest freely on three spacers, about 4”
high and also placed every 120 degrees.
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Fig. 10.19.1 Single baffle smoker |
Fig. 10.19.2 Two baffle plates with spacers |
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Fig. 10.19.3 Overlapping plates baffle.You may use two solid 1/8” overlapping plates and the size should correspond to about 60 % of the depth of the smoking chamber. The top one should be 4” higher than the bottom one and will overlap it by 4”. |
Fig.10.19.4 Gravel baffle One of the easiest, most effective baffles can be made by placing medium size river gravel on a suitable screen. |
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The above information comes from the
book "Meat Smoking and Smokehouse
Design" by Adam Marianski
Many different types of smokers, some of them very pretty,
can be viewed on our site in Photo Galleries.
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