Welcome to the EGGhead Forum - a great place to visit and packed with tips and EGGspert advice! You can also join the conversation and get more information and amazing kamado recipes by following Big Green Egg to Experience our World of Flavor™ at:
Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch
Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest | Youtube | Vimeo
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.
Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch
MiniMax owners: PSA pertaining to the carrier handle.
Comments
-
caliking said:@egger ave your mod looks like it takes care of the problem. Filed away for future reference.1 Large BGE, 1 Mini BGE, 1 Minimax BGE, Original wife and 3 dogs living in the heart of BBQ country in Round Rock Texas.
"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it."
Albert Einstein -
Good to know.
I think I'll make the handle piece solid. Drill and tap it from both ends ought to do the trick.
Dead smack in the middle of NH -
Anyone reach out to bge for replacements yet?
-
Not all warm and fuzzy on the replacements as both gen 1 and gen 2 have failed. That's why I had 2 made from solid aluminum.
SE PA
XL, Lg, Mini max and OKJ offset -
Good job, those handles look great. However, as a side note you may or may not have noticed that @The_Buffalo has updated the
picture on his post. The weld is solid all the way around rather than just tacked in a few spots. -
When using dissimilar metals, you may enhance the opportunity for galvanic corrosion on all contact points. Watch for paint bubbling where the metals connect. Screws that are different from the metal handles go first. Use of nylon washers help."Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
I don't own a MM but have been following this thread. I would take that sucker to my shop and simply weld the handles to the the frame. Of course I'm assuming both pieces are mild steel. At least they appear to be. Touch up with a little paint and no more worries.
Tommy
Middle of Nowhere, Northern Kentucky
1 M, 1 XL, a BlackStone,1 old Webber, a Border Collie, a German Shepherd and 3 of her pups, and 2 Yorkies -
YukonRon said:When using dissimilar metals, you may enhance the opportunity for galvanic corrosion on all contact points. Watch for paint bubbling where the metals connect. Screws that are different from the metal handles go first. Use of nylon washers help.
I used SS screw to fasten them. Plus the powder coating on the nest frame is more durable than spray paint.
SE PA
XL, Lg, Mini max and OKJ offset -
On their way to get powder coated, solid aluminum.Egging year 'round in North Dakota
-
Aluminum and stainless are not necessarily friendly together. A little bit of anti-sieze will help between the two.
-
Sea2Ski said:Unfortunately, I had the "new" handle failed me. The part that failed was the welded 6 pointed "nut" that the bolt feeds into. If you look at that part, the whole thing snapped out, and the welds failed. According to the picture that is to be welded in the handle, on mine, it is on the screw.XLBGE, MMBGE, CyberQ
-
If it was easy enough...someone could sell some of these as a kit. Just a thought those with the toolsSeattle, WA
-
1move said:Sea2Ski said:Unfortunately, I had the "new" handle failed me. The part that failed was the welded 6 pointed "nut" that the bolt feeds into. If you look at that part, the whole thing snapped out, and the welds failed. According to the picture that is to be welded in the handle, on mine, it is on the screw.SE PA
XL, Lg, Mini max and OKJ offset -
RiverRatSkier said:Aluminum and stainless are not necessarily friendly together. A little bit of anti-sieze will help between the two.
But, I build and repair packaging machinery for big pharma and I've seen SS bolts threaded into aluminum for 15+ yrs with next to no galvanic action visible.
SE PA
XL, Lg, Mini max and OKJ offset -
@n8er Did you tap those? Never done it myself and am kinda hesitant to buy the material and then fail tapping itAustin, Tx
-
bgeaddikt said:@n8er Did you tap those? Never done it myself and am kinda hesitant to buy the material and then fail tapping itEgging year 'round in North Dakota
-
chuckytheegghead said:Anyone reach out to bge for replacements yet?1 Large BGE, 1 Mini BGE, 1 Minimax BGE, Original wife and 3 dogs living in the heart of BBQ country in Round Rock Texas.
"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it."
Albert Einstein -
egger ave said:chuckytheegghead said:Anyone reach out to bge for replacements yet?
-
bgeaddikt said:@n8er Did you tap those? Never done it myself and am kinda hesitant to buy the material and then fail tapping it
Kinda depends how you're set up. If you've got a bench vice you can pull it off with relative ease. Something to guide the tap would be a definite plus.
A tap block is nothing more than something close to the diameter of the tap
that will help to guide it in straight.
That being said, by the time you buy the tap, drill, material, it might be cheaper to have a machine shop do it.
Dead smack in the middle of NH -
insaneh said:bgeaddikt said:@n8er Did you tap those? Never done it myself and am kinda hesitant to buy the material and then fail tapping it
Kinda depends how you're set up. If you've got a bench vice you can pull it off with relative ease. Something to guide the tap would be a definite plus.
A tap block is nothing more than something close to the diameter of the tap
that will help to guide it in straight.
That being said, by the time you buy the tap, drill, material, it might be cheaper to have a machine shop do it.
@YukonRon I agree on the galvanic corrosion possibility (almost certainty). FWIW I haven't had this issue on mine. That doesn't mean I won't though.
LBGE 2013 & MM 2014Die Hard HUSKER & BRONCO FANFlying Low & Slow in "Da Burg" FL -
Very true. A poor design. It does leave the market open for aftermarket eggcessories though.Dead smack in the middle of NH
-
chuckytheegghead said:egger ave said:chuckytheegghead said:Anyone reach out to bge for replacements yet?1 Large BGE, 1 Mini BGE, 1 Minimax BGE, Original wife and 3 dogs living in the heart of BBQ country in Round Rock Texas.
"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it."
Albert Einstein -
FarmerTom said:I don't own a MM but have been following this thread. I would take that sucker to my shop and simply weld the handles to the the frame. Of course I'm assuming both pieces are mild steel. At least they appear to be. Touch up with a little paint and no more worries.FarmerTom said:I don't own a MM but have been following this thread. I would take that sucker to my shop and simply weld the handles to the the frame. Of course I'm assuming both pieces are mild steel. At least they appear to be. Touch up with a little paint and no more worries.1 Large BGE, 1 Mini BGE, 1 Minimax BGE, Original wife and 3 dogs living in the heart of BBQ country in Round Rock Texas.
"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it."
Albert Einstein -
pescadorzih said:RiverRatSkier said:Aluminum and stainless are not necessarily friendly together. A little bit of anti-sieze will help between the two.
But, I build and repair packaging machinery for big pharma and I've seen SS bolts threaded into aluminum for 15+ yrs with next to no galvanic action visible.
-
Yeah when I got my MM, I was not that thrilled with the carry handles either. That and the fact when I did carry it I always wanted a shelf or mate with it on the side. This what I came up with. The shelves fold down and lock into place and also become the carry handles. I now realize this pic is for the mini, I made an improved version for the MM. I use the MM mainly for camping and the shelves have been a great addition.
-
@firebike I have seen that picture online but never could find the owner. Did you design and make that carrier? Or have a shop fabricate it?Austin, Tx
-
Yeah, I designed and built it. It has been through a few changes since this picture. Even this one for my mini did not start this way. I originally had tubular handles, but needed the side wings and went from there. I cut and bent everything at my house, although I have made a few for friends and actually had the aluminum plate laser cut first and then bent the shelves myself. Although it adds about 7-8 pounds(if I remember right) to overall weight, the usefulness is worth it. It is a handful with the MM but can't imagine not having it. Sidenote, I was really surprised at how well the aluminum sheds the heat from the bottom of the eggs. I originally had designed feet on it to give it space, but since then I have fired it up to around 700-800* with it sitting flat on a wooden table with no marks and can sit my hand right on the bottom no problem.
-
firebike said:Yeah, I designed and built it. It has been through a few changes since this picture. Even this one for my mini did not start this way. I originally had tubular handles, but needed the side wings and went from there. I cut and bent everything at my house, although I have made a few for friends and actually had the aluminum plate laser cut first and then bent the shelves myself. Although it adds about 7-8 pounds(if I remember right) to overall weight, the usefulness is worth it. It is a handful with the MM but can't imagine not having it. Sidenote, I was really surprised at how well the aluminum sheds the heat from the bottom of the eggs. I originally had designed feet on it to give it space, but since then I have fired it up to around 700-800* with it sitting flat on a wooden table with no marks and can sit my hand right on the bottom no problem.Austin, Tx
-
pescadorzih said:YukonRon said:When using dissimilar metals, you may enhance the opportunity for galvanic corrosion on all contact points. Watch for paint bubbling where the metals connect. Screws that are different from the metal handles go first. Use of nylon washers help.
I used SS screw to fasten them. Plus the powder coating on the nest frame is more durable than spray paint.
This is what I know; Not all powdercoats are created equal. In fact, there are several dozen brands of liquid coatings, that can, and consistantly do, outperform the specs for many, funtional, and non functional, powdercoating applications.
Typically when specs are written for the product, there are usually 40-50 performance characteristics to the coating. Not all products require a coating as durable as what you will find on an outdoor cable/electrical junction boxes, as an example.
The performance of the coating is intimately reliant on the preparation of the substrate, as it is on the specifications. Poorly prepared substrates, lead to coating failures.
Just because it has a powdercoat finish, is not indicative of the toughness or durability of the finish.
I hope this helps. It was not meant to be offensive to anyone.
"Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
NPHuskerFL said:insaneh said:bgeaddikt said:@n8er Did you tap those? Never done it myself and am kinda hesitant to buy the material and then fail tapping it
Kinda depends how you're set up. If you've got a bench vice you can pull it off with relative ease. Something to guide the tap would be a definite plus.
A tap block is nothing more than something close to the diameter of the tap
that will help to guide it in straight.
That being said, by the time you buy the tap, drill, material, it might be cheaper to have a machine shop do it.
@YukonRon I agree on the galvanic corrosion possibility (almost certainty). FWIW I haven't had this issue on mine. That doesn't mean I won't though."Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky
Categories
- All Categories
- 183.3K EggHead Forum
- 15.8K Forum List
- 460 EGGtoberfest
- 1.9K Forum Feedback
- 10.4K Off Topic
- 2.2K EGG Table Forum
- 1 Rules & Disclaimer
- 9K Cookbook
- 12 Valentines Day
- 91 Holiday Recipes
- 223 Appetizers
- 518 Baking
- 2.5K Beef
- 88 Desserts
- 167 Lamb
- 2.4K Pork
- 1.5K Poultry
- 33 Salads and Dressings
- 320 Sauces, Rubs, Marinades
- 544 Seafood
- 175 Sides
- 121 Soups, Stews, Chilis
- 38 Vegetarian
- 102 Vegetables
- 315 Health
- 293 Weight Loss Forum