Lets start this thread with this - I know dozens of you are going to want to chime in with "lolz deeko real men use charcoal ha gas is for n00bs" or some other elitist garbage that has nothing to do with my thread. Save it. I intend to get a simple charcoal grill as well, but I'm generally too lazy for that so I want a nice gas grill as well, and that is what this thread pertains to.
Ok, now that we've got that out of the way....
I'm looking at grills in the $400-$600 range. I really like the Char Broils in that range, they've got some grills with a lot of features, infrared cooking (which really I don't know much about, but quick internet research seems to approve), etc. Webers are much simpler, and much more expensive. To get the same grilling space, burners, surfaces, etc as the $400 Char Broil, I need to spend $700 in Weber. The consensus is that they're a higher build quality and therefore more durable.
My question is...does that make them worth the premium? If something fails on the Char Broil, I can get a replacement part, and it will still be cheaper than the Weber. Does anyone have experience with both brands? As a side note, opinions on infrared vs standard propane grills?
Jenn Air grill's can be had for the same price and they're better IMHO. Not that Webers are bad, but Jenn Air makes some of the sweetest grills out there. Weber is like Toto, good Toilets but mad expensive.
i bought the Weber Silver Genesis from amazon ~10yrs ago for my parents house warming party.
THe ceramic is beginning to crack. I keep telling them to call and check if it's under warrenty. Sigh...
I'm looking at Weber gas too for roughly the same price range. I don't BBQ that much but I think it'd be nice to have versus the Baby-Q I currently use.
100% yes. Forget everything else, they're durable and their customer support kicks ass.
The grill won't rust out, but if it does, there's a warranty on the parts and they honor it. I bought a floor model "as is" with missing parts. I called Weber and told them, 100% truthful, that I bought a Home Depot floor model (Genesis E-310) that I knew was missing some parts, and if I could order them. I figured I got a good enough deal that I could just buy what I didn't have. The guy said no problem, asked me for my serial #, and asked me what I was missing. He then told me to enjoy my grill, and that the missing parts would be covered under warranty for me. Also asked me if I wanted an owners manual and recipe book.
That's service. Not to mention the grill is absolutely awesome. I do have one side starting to heat up more than the other (right side of the burners), so I might need a new regulator or burner assembly. I don't doubt for a second that they will have me covered on that.
Buy a Weber and keep it for 15 years.
Sometimes hot spots (or cold spots) are nice if GRILLING when cooking odd sized shapes like T bones. The tip can cook quickly so putting that part on a cold spot makes it cook more evenly.
Weber has a premium? No, Vermont Castings has a premium. Weber is the price point that the average person goes after. They have alot of volume and they do good designs for the most part.
I have a Weber and love it. I'd buy another one day. I think mine is a genesis Gold (no side burner). My only gripe with my 3 year old grill is hte small wheels on hte bottom. They are cheap pieces of junk that break. Hopefully this is improved these days.
Cook ribeyes, not T-bones. :\Good call on that. I do use that side of the grill to quickly get wood chips smoldering and quick searing. I suppose I should continue to take advantage of that.
