Episode: 3225 Title: HPR3225: Grill repair Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3225/hpr3225.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:08:54 --- This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3,225 for Friday 11 December 2020. Today's show is entitled Grill Repair. It is hosted by Operator and is about 17 minutes long and carries an explicit flag. The summary is I go over some grill tips, Repair. This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com. Music Hello everyone and welcome to a quick tip for maybe a quick episode. It's about grills. So if you have a grill and you're one of those people that advise the grill every 3-5 years, this probably should work for you. I got a grill 10-11 years ago for anniversary and for my uncle in 5 years down the road, I covered it and treated it nice and all that stuff. We don't use it a whole ton. But after about 5 years, what happens is over time and he's worst at saying the damage is he's been at the atmosphere. The damage is stuff. He agrees, he gets the heat, he gets the grease, and they have fight and they get put a little in the watching. Your primary objective is to protect the line. We're on the roofing team, definitely on the roofing team. All the ways to the holes coming out of the grill. If you can do that, nothing else really matters. The bottom rusts out, the sides rust out, the upside down rust out. This is something with the coldest one to screw in. When you start talking about screws over the course of 10 years sitting outside, they dig rust and they become pretty much pointless and useless. After a certain amount of time, safety starts to become an issue, because you don't want elements falling down from the bottom. If you have a wooden deck, obviously, or even works plastic, I'm sure there's plastic stuff as mine would be better than wood, but from a safety heat perspective. Anyway, so if your bottom is rusted out, it's not the biggest deal. Mine starts to kind of move, prefer a little bit more in some holes here and there. I don't know how effective it is to actually clean the grill itself. I haven't really done any research to figure out, hey, is it better to clean your grill, pick and span, and then have the elements attack at nice new, shangy metal? Or is it better to just let them let it eat itself and let the stuff kick on in like a few days, right? So my thing was, about five years after I got this grill, it's a relatively normal Kenmore and you know, it's fucking Chinese-yum shit now. That's the problem is that they don't make grills like they used to, it's all this shit, and you can get it. I'm sure you can probably get some fancy ceramic, whatever, if that's not what this is about. This is your average Joe clown, like me, he divides the grill as a gift, and you know, I don't want to be one of those people that throws the grill outside in the front line, because I don't know how to fix it, and I don't want to spend, I want to spend another $300 on a grill at three years, which is just the phosphorus to me. So anyways, I replaced what they call the firewall, which is the part that protects, it's pretty important. The firewall protects the gas line, I'm making all this shit up as I go along. The firewall, what I'm assuming, protects the gas line from basically running up through the side and rusting out, and it's just something catching fire through the actual gas line. So you want to protect the gas line and you want to protect everything leading up to the elements under the thing. So I replaced the firewall because it started rusting out. It's starting to exhibit some signs of rust, and so we got another like three or four. I can already see a hole through it, where I'm not supposed to see a hole through the firewall here. So the firewall is probably going to have to be your place again, along with these three little things that protect the heating elements. So there's these three little track hod, little tent-looking things, and I'll go over why I actually fixed mine, and I didn't have to spend a dime. But there's these little, tents that go over the heating elements to protect them from getting rusted out, quicker than normal, because to get grease on something, and then you get heat on something, then it just kind of starts heating away at itself. These actually look relatively decent. I replaced them. I probably could have waited another while before I did. I'm putting this one back in and one of the little pabbies is completely rusted off. It's not exactly all there, but it's serving its purpose, right? My heating elements are being protected by these little tents. I replaced the little grill covers because the grills were starting to actually, the grill grills. It's three pieces, and you can modulate the pull them out. So if you're just cooking something, you can pull one out and take it in. Which is actually nice, instead of having to clean the whole grill, you just clean the bits and pieces of it. Anyways, I replaced those and like I said, for five years, and I usually, you want to get two pro paintings, because the last thing you want to do is go outside, start cooking, or usually it's already dead before you start cooking. And you have to rank around to the store or just say, forget it, I just want to make a reason. I'm not going to have to figure something out to do something else to do with this mean. So you want to have two pro paintings, definitely, as it has a backup. And if you can, there's something else to add to my father added to it. I think to tell like an auto shutoff or some kind of pressure gauge or something which I haven't needed. I don't know what he had. He had some kind of fancy doodle that's connected to the pro painting to either check the pressure or do something. Anyways, I don't remember how to remove what that was. I'll put a note, show you what it's called, I'm actually putting the grill back together now after kind of tormenting it. Quite a bit here. So you want two pro paintings, because obviously you don't want to eat in the middle of cooking and then I put what they do to the store and get a pro painting or just bail and do something else. I've already replaced one of the screws here up here to a rusted out or just here or something. But this is one of the ones with the sideburner. But anyways, I spent $150 on this thing and it was a gift to me, so I figured he probably spent two or three hundred dollars on it. It's got a sideburner, it's got a little primer on it. These little lighting things, I had to buy another one of these, the igniter, the igniter thing, which actually lasted all of the parts so far that I've ever done. Out of everything, the igniter surprisingly lasted a long time. I actually put contact cleaner down in there to protect it from the elements, which probably gave it another five years to be honest. Every time I replaced the batteries, I just spray more contact cleaner down in there. You don't have contact cleaner, buy it, it's great. If you don't have silicon spray, buy it, it's great. It's safe to use on almost everything. Silicon spray is great for plastics, and there's not really any bad application of silicon spray. That I'm aware of. There probably are other plastics, perhaps, certain plastics, perhaps, new plastics. You give the plastic itself to stick down the oils and the plastic might break down. Weak air oils from silicon. Oh no! If you get like a hundred percent silicone when you're going to shoot in, the stuff I have is the blaster. All the blaster stuff I have. I have the silicon spray. I have the blaster blaster, which will eat away, like, at rusty stuff. If you need to adjust a whatever act, I'm actually looking at one that I used to. I couldn't get it off, but I did get it secured, securely screwed back on there, but we had a faucet that the valve on the faucet crept out. Well, I had just purchased another faucet and attached the faucet to the faucet, instead of having to re-sodder the pipe connected to the house. So we basically have an open, a failed open. I finally got to first stop leaking with various, various ways, and then I put a faucet on top of that and I used the blaster to break all that shit up, so that I could actually unscrew it and get it sealed back. But I did not want to have to fix it the right way. I wanted me easy fix, so I put a faucet on the faucet. So that's an example of using the blaster where you got stubborn stuff. If you've got like battery s at all or something, you can use it for that. Anyways, I'm still rambling. I don't know what to do. But I guess I should put it back on. I'm not sure where I am. It goes on there. I two-propane tanks are replaced with the igniter and whatever. And it's been running for like another five years or more. I feel like it's been here for a while. So I want to say we, well I guess we got it when we moved in and then I bought parts for it at some point in time. But I want to say it all looks different. I guess that was five years. Since I've missed it. So I started to think about, you know, it's not, you know, I started to think about what I was cooking. And I noticed I said, well, just use the other thing. And then it's about cooking things and still have the same problem. And we used it like two or three times. But before finally I said, something is obviously wrong. I can't have two bad tanks with the same exact amount of pressure. I took the plates off and everything. And I looked at the gas coming out. And one, as well as the other. So it's two pro-paint tanks that you bought at two different times because the same amount of gas coming out of this. It's going to be regulated, right? There's also like little holes, you know, that the heating element is not, but I know to protect those. So they weren't damaged at all. And so I knew that it wasn't that, and I was pretty sure it was regulated. So it took it all apart. It was a pain that I had to use. Two pliers, or a wrench and a pliers to get the screw off the thing here. So I made sure I got some grease that all up in the circuit. I figured it hard again if I needed to. That looks bad, right? It looks too bad that's okay. So what I found out after looking at that said, you know, I've messed with these regulators before. I've punched them around a little bit and smacked them around a little bit and gotten them to work. I have a little quirk here that it was giving to me by a little box. And it had a regulator issue also. And I ran silicon through it, smacked it around a little bit. You know, you turn on and off the gas. You kind of smack it around and kind of get those valves going. I've never taken a regulator apart. I didn't look at how they worked a long time ago. I did. I don't know how they worked. But the idea is like this is supposed to have some kind of tilt on it. If you're like mocking around and don't put the gas on. You're something up and turn the gas on. I don't close. Close. Open. I can't tell it. So I ran silicon and using a well, my mouth. Or a can of air. Or a if you want to use as a compressor to clean it in and out. And I put enough silicon in it so that it would drip all the way down the little pipe. It's a little pipe. And then I kind of blew it. So I saw silicon coming out of the little hole on the regulator. And then there was silicon coming out of the front part good pleasure into the plugs in the first things in total. All right. I got silicon in and out of this thing. Which probably isn't that practical. I blew it out as much as I could as I could. With the can of air, blew it all out, got as much as the silicon out of there that I could. And actually smacked it around a little bit. But the hammer and beat it on the table, just kind of loosen stuff up before and after I did that. And seems to be working good. Because before when I turned it on, it would just kind of wouldn't make that sound. Like that sound of that sound where like something is angry. And now, you know, I hear this when I turn it on. I hear something like a sound I get to see these yellow, I see the other flames. Whereas before it was just kind of the little pillaging flame coming out. And it was not coming out with a force. You know, there was some logic in thinking that maybe some spider is got in there and messed up the line. There's something like that. Obviously I'm then not even logical here. Something like that. I kind of messed up a bit. Something in the process. Anyway, you know, the sideburner like ever. So that's as long as short of it. It's just, don't be one of those people. Just throw away your grill. Take the time to protect the elements. The heating elements. The parts of the gas comes out of. You don't really worry about the worry about much else. You know, you want to protect the gas of lines from getting rusted. So if your firewall craps out, don't let it rust out the rest. And then eventually, possibly hit your line. And then like, you know, call the problem and such things. I mean, it is a real worst case scenario. Your grill starts kind of getting hot and melting. And then like, flames start shooting out of the side of it. Or something, which is not ideal. But, you know, kind of for me, the worst case scenario would be like, I don't even know, like, the gas would have billed up somewhere and blow it out. And then, you know, the thing would explode and become something. Grinning it or something. But, in general, you're even going to be able to protect the elements and protect the lines, the gas lines, I feel comfortable enough to do whatever that I want to do with the stupid thing. But, don't be all those people that throw away your grill and put it out in the front on. You know, take the time to the research. You're going to cost you 150 bucks. This cost me nothing to fix. You know, this regulated probably going to last me another five years. And maybe I got a couple of years in the part that protects the burners. But, now, I don't have to go by regularly during and I also don't have to swap out the paint tanks. I was about to go to get another broken thing to say screw it. But, you know, I'm like being able to do some troubleshooting and realize that it's not the tanks. It's not regulated. So, I've had some success doing the same thing before with other regulated stuff that you're going to throw on this guy in the same thing as well. But, hope, hope, hope. You can order parts. Like I said, I wouldn't pay you more than 150 bucks for parts. You can pay what for parts from one site to the other. So, shop around. Get the part number. Get the part number that not the website uses, but the part number of the actual part. Start research for that. Any of the other other part numbers you get from the results of that search. Aftermarket part number are third-party parking numbers. It's just like four people that make this crap. So, really, there's only like a handful of actual different kinds of regulators for the market that's, you know, your home people. Piece of garbage. Real. Anyways. Hope that helps you out. You'll have a good one and stay safe and whatnot. Get some grilling. Later. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. Music. You