Openai/6946f01f-44c4-800e-8d76-ed6d3fe04fdd
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: Is this quarter inch steel or are new ones like this made with thinner steel.[edit | edit source]
Is this quarter inch steel or are new ones like this made with thinner steel. I have one I bought in 2016 that's pretty heavy
Assistant: Short answer: no—this is not ¼-inch steel, and the new ones are thinner than the older ones like your 2016 unit.[edit | edit source]
Short answer: no—this is not ¼-inch steel, and the new ones are thinner than the older ones like your 2016 unit.
What that smoker is[edit | edit source]
That looks like an Oklahoma Joe’s offset (Highland / Longhorn–style) sold through Home Depot.
Steel thickness reality[edit | edit source]
- ¼-inch steel (0.250") is extremely heavy and is found on custom or competition pits, not mass-market smokers under $500.
- Even the old “heavy” Oklahoma Joe’s were never ¼-inch.
Older (pre-2017-ish) Oklahoma Joe’s[edit | edit source]
- Typically 12-gauge steel → about 0.105" thick
- Much heavier
- Better heat retention
- Less warping
- This is why your 2016 unit feels noticeably heavy
Newer Oklahoma Joe’s (current production)[edit | edit source]
- Mostly 14-gauge steel → about 0.075" thick
- Around 30% thinner
- Lighter
- Loses heat faster
- More prone to lid leakage and temp swings
Why people think the old ones were ¼-inch[edit | edit source]
Because:
- They weigh a lot compared to modern box-store smokers
- They hold heat better
- The steel sounds and feels thicker …but true ¼-inch pits usually:
- Cost $1,500–$4,000+
- Weigh several hundred pounds
- Often need a trailer or multiple people to move
Bottom line[edit | edit source]
- ❌ Not ¼-inch steel
- ✅ Your 2016 smoker is thicker and better built than the new ones
- ⚠️ The current ~$397 version is thinner steel and not the same quality
If you want, I can:
- Help you measure your existing steel thickness
- Suggest mods to make the newer ones perform closer to the old models
- Compare your 2016 unit to true ¼-inch pits so you can feel the difference on paper
Just tell me 👍
User: When did they start making it with thinner steel[edit | edit source]
When did they start making it with thinner steel
Assistant: Here’s what I could find about when Oklahoma Joe’s smokers shifted to thinner steel construction:[edit | edit source]
Here’s what I could find about when Oklahoma Joe’s smokers shifted to thinner steel construction:
🕰️ Timeline of steel thickness changes[edit | edit source]
Before 1997–1998
- Original Oklahoma Joe’s smokers (the ones made by founder Joe Davidson in Oklahoma) were built with much thicker steel, often from heavy pipe and sometimes close to ¼-inch in places, and were all welded. Reiko Allen[2]
~1998 (after Char-Broil purchase)
- Char-Broil bought the Oklahoma Joe’s brand in 1998 and moved manufacturing overseas to China. Oklahoma Joe's BBQ[3]
- Around this time the construction shifted away from heavy pipe and fully welded bodies toward bolted components and thinner gauge stamped/rolled steel to hit lower price points. THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS[4]
🧱 What this means for the “thick vs thin” change[edit | edit source]
- The heavy old USA-made units were basically phased out after 1998, with the steel getting thinner pretty much once Char-Broil began mass production for big-box retailers. Flavor365[5]
- Your 2016 model was already part of that later, thinner era relative to the originals — but many people still think pre-Char-Broil / early Char-Broil models (2000s–early 2010s) had heavier gauge than more recent ones. User reports suggest that even since the mid-2010s, the metal gauge and overall build got a bit lighter/cheaper compared to older Char-Broil era models. Reddit[6]
📌 More detail from online chatter[edit | edit source]
- Some enthusiasts claim that when the company lost its original all-welded, heavy pipe construction and went to bolted panels under Char-Broil, the build quality dropped — meaning thinner steel and joints rather than thick welded barrels. THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS[7]
💡 Summary[edit | edit source]
- Before ~1998: Thicker steel (often heavy pipe/closer to original design) — much heavier smokers. Reiko Allen[8]
- 1998 onward: Transition to thinner steel and mass manufacturing overseas — this is where the construction got lighter. Flavor365[9]
- Mid-2010s to today: Continued trend toward lighter gauge steel in the current retail models compared to even older Char-Broil era units (but still heavier than many super-cheap smokers). Reddit[10]
If you want, I can help you identify your smoker’s approximate year based on markings/serial details, which can clue you in on how heavy its steel should be. Just let me know!
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Steel thickness comparison". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Reiko Allen". Reiko Allen. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Oklahoma Joe's BBQ". Oklahoma Joe's BBQ. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS". THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Flavor365". eathealthy365.com. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Reddit". reddit.com. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS". THE BBQ BRETHREN FORUMS. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Reiko Allen". Reiko Allen. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Flavor365". eathealthy365.com. Retrieved 2025-12-21.
- ↑ "Reddit". reddit.com. Retrieved 2025-12-21.