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I used my new Smokette for the first time today. I used a Maverick Smoker Thermometer to monitor the smoker and meat temperature while I smoked two chickens. I initially set the smoker temperature to 225 degrees per the recipe in the cookbook I received with the smoker. The smoker never reached 225. I increased the smoker temperature setting to half way between 225 and 250. The temperature got to 226 and then began to drop to a low of 200. I then increased the setting to 250 degrees and the temperature never got over 225. I was expecting the actual smoker temperature to exceed the setting and decrease to lower than the setting so that the average would be about the set temperature. I am wondering if my smoker is working correctly??? The meat temperature never got over 172 degrees eventhough I left it in the smoker 2 hours longer than the recipe said. I was trying to get the meat internal temperature to 180 - 185 degrees which is the correct temperature for poultry according to several cookbooks. I even checked the calibration of my Maverick thermometer and, if anything, it is reading high. Any suggestions?
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Chicken safe temp is 170* in the thigh and the check is to be sure juices run clear from the thigh joint.

If you are checking the Smokette temp in the above manner, give it 30 minutes to warm up first.

Like alluded to above, the smoker should be properly seasoned when new. Put 4-6 oz. of wood in the woodbox of the otherwise empty smoker and let it go at 225* for about 6 hours. After that, properly line the bottom with foil, poke a drip hole, put a drip pan under, cover the woodbox with foil after inserting 4 more oz. of wood in, put in a big fatty hunk of well-seasoned pork with a therm probe inserted and the wire run out the top smoke hole and cook it to an internal meat temp of 195-205*, regardless of how long it takes, without opening the door at all. Best to put it in at bedtime, or 8-9 pm, set it on 200*, turn it up to 250* in the morning. Yes, make sure you are not using an extension cord and if you are, make sure it is larger than the attached cord and not as long.

Take notes!

Cool
All 15 amp circuits in the US require 14 gauge wire (any construction in the last 40 yrs) leading to all of the outlets that are controlled from that circuit's breaker.

The smokettes have a 500 watt element in them and if full on it will pull a maximum of 5 amps. Therefore a 14 gauge extention cord will be plenty. You are bound to loose more in the connections at the wall and the smoker unit than the voltage drop of the cord itself. So make sure that the cord has firm connections at each end of the extention cord and the outlet is in good shape. With all this in mind it still is not wise to use any extention cord longer than needed and I would keep them less than 50 ft. in length.

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