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View Full Version : Turkey Fryer/Burners



cwskirmisher
10-20-2009, 10:25 AM
After about 20 years, my old plumbers furnace was not getting my pot up to temp anymore, and it took forever to get the lead in a liquid state. I went in search of a replacement. Well, I found a great deal, had to share this - Home Depot (online) and Amazon both have the Bayou SP10 turkey fryers, high pressure (20psi) stoves (185,000 btu) on sale for $39. I have been watching the prices on this stove for about 6 months- normally they are around $60. It comes with a metal mesh protected 4' propane hose, high pressure regulator, needle valve to regulate the flame, and a sturdy frame with a wind break. Nice pacakge for the money. I am looking out the window now for the UPS man....

angus6
10-20-2009, 12:03 PM
you can buy just the burners them selfs for around $13 that's how I did my smelting setup

cwskirmisher
10-20-2009, 02:54 PM
Yes you can, but you also need a high pressure regulator for another $20 or so, available at Ace or other h/w stores. That's about $33 in parts. With a complete setup with needle valve and steel frame with wind break, I don't think $39 is a bad deal for a turn-key setup.

angus6
10-20-2009, 03:11 PM
I don't think $39 is a bad deal for a turn-key setup.

$40 is a good deal for my area also
I was just bringing up that the burners themselves are also avalible as I've picked up a fryer set up before just cause a $13 burner was bad

cwskirmisher
11-02-2009, 05:47 PM
OK - got the turkey burner out of the box. It is awesome. Almost too hot - if you turn it loose, it can actually blow itself out, so you have to watch it and not turn it to max heat. The black paint burns away over the flame in the first few minutes - not sure if they even used high-temp paint, but at that level of heat, not sure any paint would work. Bottom line - it is a great stove for the money. Now... anyone know where I can get a cast iron pot/dutch oven that will hold around 50-60 lbs at a time, cheap?

azcoyhunter
11-02-2009, 05:49 PM
I would look at Harbour Freight

evan price
11-10-2009, 03:34 AM
Don't overlook cheap stainless steel stockpots at the used stuff store, a restaurant supply place, or the Salvation Army-type donation stores. Also if you are picking up lead at a recycling place, look in the stainless steel bins, you might find something old, stained and dented but perfect for smelting, for cheap.