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Anyone built their own smoker?
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:09 am
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:09 am
I’m looking to build a smoker for the house. I was thinking of using cypress or cedar fence boards for the exterior. Any tips for interior materials for insulation? Also any dimensions would be appreciated. I need it tall enough to hang 25# of sausage on rods. I have a natural gas hook up on my house and was going to use that for my heat source with a hot plate for wood. Any tips and pictures are appreciated.
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:52 am to jmh5724
That is going to be an interesting project!
Posted on 10/26/25 at 4:41 pm to jmh5724
I can fit close to 25#s in my Pitt boss vertical smoker. Don't have to babysit a fire with it.
Posted on 10/26/25 at 7:05 pm to jmh5724
Not a building, but I made an ugly drum smoker that works really well and can fit a bunch of meat in there. Maybe the pictures will work. Imgur is crapping out this evening.
Posted on 10/26/25 at 11:35 pm to jmh5724
I built mine a few years back and used treated wood for the framing and the entire inside was completely covered using 1/2 inch Hardie Backer Board that is used for underlayment for tile flooring.
It is big enough for me to smoke 6 large pork butts on 3 wire shelves inside the smoke box. I can either hot or cold smoke depending on how I want to use it. Cold for smoking salmon or cheese and from there I can keep it around 250 for things like smoking turkeys, pork butts, briskets, etc.
Also, depending on how I set up my coals, I can keep it in the 160 to 180 range for things like beef jerky, pork belly for bacon, andouille etc.
I do use one of those stainless steel mazes that lets me use pellets and that will normally last as long as 5 hours before needing to be reloaded.
It has steel casters on all 4 corners to make moving it around very easy.
It's pretty much my go-to for smoking but I also have one of those upright bullet type with 2 grates, a coal pan and a water pan and an electric Masterbuilt smoker with 4 wire shelves that gets used the least.
It is big enough for me to smoke 6 large pork butts on 3 wire shelves inside the smoke box. I can either hot or cold smoke depending on how I want to use it. Cold for smoking salmon or cheese and from there I can keep it around 250 for things like smoking turkeys, pork butts, briskets, etc.
Also, depending on how I set up my coals, I can keep it in the 160 to 180 range for things like beef jerky, pork belly for bacon, andouille etc.
I do use one of those stainless steel mazes that lets me use pellets and that will normally last as long as 5 hours before needing to be reloaded.
It has steel casters on all 4 corners to make moving it around very easy.
It's pretty much my go-to for smoking but I also have one of those upright bullet type with 2 grates, a coal pan and a water pan and an electric Masterbuilt smoker with 4 wire shelves that gets used the least.
Posted on 10/27/25 at 9:10 am to gumbo2176
Do you have any pictures of it? I was thinking building an outhouse looking upright smoker with castors so I can move it around like you mentioned
Posted on 10/27/25 at 9:36 am to jmh5724
quote:
Do you have any pictures of it? I was thinking building an outhouse looking upright smoker with castors so I can move it around like you mentioned
No pics. I own a flip phone and don't have a digital camera AND, I've never ever posted a pic on the net to date--------------Yeah, I'm that guy.........
Rough measurements from memory are just over 6 ft. tall, 30 inches wide, 18 inches deep. The actual smoke chamber is almost 2 ft. up from the ground and it is open underneath with a shelf to store the hooks I use for smoking bacon, the pan for coals and other utensils
The only wood inside the smoke chamber are six 1 x 1 cypress rails for the 3 wire racks to rest on and I glued up a few 1 x 6 x 1 in. cypress boards to make the door and that is where my temperature gauge is installed.
I don't think the whole thing cost me $100 to build and I've been using it for a few years now with great results.
Posted on 10/27/25 at 10:15 am to gumbo2176
Sounds exactly like what I’m trying to build. I don’t have the greatest carpentry skills. I have a good bit of scrap cedar boards laying around. I’ll just make a box frame and go from there
Posted on 10/27/25 at 6:55 pm to jmh5724
We mainly cold smoked things in Alaska and just used tin. It was usually tin salvaged from old buildings so nail holes didn’t matter.
Posted on 10/27/25 at 8:35 pm to jmh5724
If you are going wood you dont need insulation per se.
Would really think about location of your heat source and something like a cabinet smoker will be way hotter than something like an offset. Especially if you have the heat source at the bottom.
Also, research if you are doing fence boards. Some are treated with "pesticides" or bug repellent. You can usually find better boards at a local place for cheaper and better.
Would really think about location of your heat source and something like a cabinet smoker will be way hotter than something like an offset. Especially if you have the heat source at the bottom.
Also, research if you are doing fence boards. Some are treated with "pesticides" or bug repellent. You can usually find better boards at a local place for cheaper and better.
Posted on 10/28/25 at 12:58 pm to fightin tigers
The cedar boards come untreated. I was thinking of just lining the bottom with some flashing to prevent the wood from charring around the burner box.
Posted on 10/28/25 at 4:01 pm to jmh5724
quote:
Sounds exactly like what I’m trying to build. I don’t have the greatest carpentry skills. I have a good bit of scrap cedar boards laying around. I’ll just make a box frame and go from there
In my opinion, the more redneck engineered a smoker looks, the better the meat that comes out of it. You're not building cabinetry or doing crown moulding, just wing it and post up some pics when done.
Posted on 11/4/25 at 6:16 pm to TU Rob
Still have some finishing touches but this is what I have so far. I had a piece of granite laying around from our outdoor kitchen so I used it as my floor to be a heat barrier and catch any pieces of burning wood that may fall. I still have to finish the roof and find some grating to make a rack and some rods to hang sausage. I ripped some fence boards to put strips over the cracks between the boards too. Will post a pic when it’s 100% complete.
Posted on 11/6/25 at 6:00 pm to jmh5724
quote:
Still have some finishing touches but this is what I have so far.
Well, for someone who claims limited carpentry skills, you did yourself proud.
That looks nice. You just need to make sure there are no flare-ups inside the smoker that could possibly set the wood used in constructing it on fire.
Smoking things like pork butts or briskets with a nice fat cap can send some of that rendered fat straight down into the pan that generates your heat and could start a flare-up. It would probably be best to put a pan under that type meat to catch the dripping fat and avoid that possibility.
Posted on 11/6/25 at 7:06 pm to jmh5724
I'm not saying it's going to catch on fire, but if it does, get pics!!! 
Posted on 11/6/25 at 10:03 pm to gumbo2176
I plan on putting some grating above the skillet to place a drip pan on. I’ll probably put some flashing around the bottom too to protect the wood from charring and catching fire.
Posted on 11/6/25 at 10:40 pm to jmh5724
I watched a guy make a cheap one out of 2 flower pots, a rack and a heating element.
He had maybe 25.00 into it.
It was cool.
He had maybe 25.00 into it.
It was cool.
Posted on 11/7/25 at 8:22 am to BottomlandBrew
Where did you source your barrel? I'm interested in making one of my own
Posted on 11/7/25 at 9:26 am to jmh5724
i would definitely put some metal flashing on the inside around 1/4 to 1/2 way up to protect from it catching on fire.
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