The heat diffuser plate can be used in the cooker to about 375 to 400 degrees. If you are cooking hotter, then the heat diffuser MUST be removed, and the direct grilling option (Grill Grates) must be used in the cooker.
If you cook at higher than 400 degrees with the heat diffuser plate installed, you may experience warping of the hopper end corners on the plate, but this may also happen during normal usage. This warping may cause temperatures in the cooker to become erratic as the corners will allow a larger volume of heat to reach the thermocouple.
Here is an example of a warped diffuser plate.
Make sure that the steel rod is not galvanized or has any zinc in it! You will have a very bad day after using it if it does. Regular steel or stainless steel are what to look for.
I turned my YS640 up to 400* for the first time this past Saturday when making a couple 12 pound turkeys. After it cooled I cleaned out the ash and re foiled my heat diffuser I noticed that it had warped it isn't sitting flat anymore. I will be making a trip to the hardware store very soon to get the rod and a piece of angle iron to put over the damper rod to keep the grease from running of it onto my patio. The angle iron length on my cooker is 3 7/8".
So I'm trying to wrap my head around this...
My diffuser is slightly warped but the hopper end corners are drooping...not raising up...
The round bar solution looks like it would fix a problem where the corners are raising...
Am I understanding this correctly?
Well, I went a bought a 1/4 inch steel rod, cut it to 19 1/2 inches, came home took the Yoder apart to try it out and I need a 1/2 inch rod to have any effect at all. I think 1/2" square stock would be better anyway. It is hard to tell for sure but the rod in the picture is larger than 1/4" maybe not.
My advise would be to measure the gap you have before buying any size rod.
If the 1/4" rod won't stay in then you don't have a problem.
My plate was warped and lifting the grates up in the left rear corner enough they were hitting the thermocouple wire.
The kind folks at Yoder (Herb) told me how to put the rod in.
The next time the pit cooled after use the plate relaxed and the rod fell out on it's own.
Thanks Herb!!
My heat defuser is not warp to that extent. But it is no longer flat. The 1/2 square stock makes it flat.
a little confused why there would be a different of a quarter of an inch for the same model.
pwrdave wrote:a little confused why there would be a different of a quarter of an inch for the same model.
Funny I have nevery had mine over 350 yet it worped. Seems to be an issue that should be addressed by Yoder if there is this many problems.
Herb,
My issue with warping seems to be similar to jeetS where that ends are warped downward instead of up. Any ideas on a fix for that circumstance. If necessary I will post a pic.
Theokoye wrote:Herb,
My issue with warping seems to be similar to jeetS where that ends are warped downward instead of up. Any ideas on a fix for that circumstance. If necessary I will post a pic.
Theokoye wrote:Herb,
My issue with warping seems to be similar to jeetS where that ends are warped downward instead of up. Any ideas on a fix for that circumstance. If necessary I will post a pic.
Is this an issue with the 1500, or just the 640? And do people foil the heat management plate on the 1500? How would you even do that?
640 and 480, not the 1500. Yes, I have seen the HMS foiled, but it is arduous and problem stricken, just as it is with the 640 and 480, but for much different reasons.
Below are the pics you requested. Hopefully they came out well enough to see what I am describing.
Thanks for the pictures.
It appears that the center of your diffuser is warped up, but the gap between the heat diffuser plate and the grate rails looks OK. Warping like this should not affect the performance of the cooker. The warping that does affect the performance of the grill, is where the corners warp up to the point of allowing too much heat and air flow direct access to the thermocouple. I would continue to use the cooker without worry. if you have further concerns, please send an email to [email protected].
to add to this, just as a point of reference, I always center the heat diffuser front to back and snug it up tight to the hopper end wall (being careful of the thermocouple wire). I find that this not only helps temperatures across the grate, but helps to keep the ash below the plate, for the very small amount that potentially could find its way up the hopper wall.
I just measure mine. On the back corner it is about 1/4" raised but on the front corner it in nearly 1 full inch raised. is this allowable or should I also be thinking about retro-fitting. I too have never had the diffuser in at over 350 so am a little concerned seeing my pit was bought last July.
westhemess wrote:I just measure mine. On the back corner it is about 1/4" raised but on the front corner it in nearly 1 full inch raised. is this allowable or should I also be thinking about retro-fitting. I too have never had the diffuser in at over 350 so am a little concerned seeing my pit was bought last July.
Thanks, I will give it a try next week as I am heading out of town tomorrow.
My new plate came with the upgrades as a replacement for the old diffuser. I am confused as to why the quality of the new diffuser is so much worse than my old one. I had zero warping problems with the old one. Could someone also tell me why there was a replacement diffuser made? Mine is sagging in the middle. I will take pictures. My temperatures are so widely fluctuating I thought it was my computer. I will also be ordering a new Igniter Rod. I am not sure if this is connected to the heat soaring or not. Coincidence? Maybe.