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  • Cleaning a Gas Grill
  • From "DIY Home Repair & Remodeling"
    episode DIR-161
    advertisement

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    Figure A

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    Figure B

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    Figure C

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    Some brushes are designed to fit between the wires on the grill.

    Gas grills can get messy pretty quickly, but they're not too hard to clean.

    Materials:

    Large plastic tub half filled with soapy water
    Plastic spatula
    Nylon pads
    Plastic scouring pad
    Grill brushes, made with soft metal such as brass
    New lava rocks
    Wet/dry shop vacuum cleaner

    1. Before you start cleaning a gas grill, disconnect and remove the gas canister. This makes the cleaning job both easier and safer.
    2. Remove the main grills (figure A), and place them in a large tub of soapy water. Allow them to soak for an hour or so. Remove the upper racks and soak them too.
    3. Remove and discard the lava rocks. They lose their effectiveness after a year or two as they're covered with grease drippings.
    4. Take out the lava-rock rack and soak it with the grills. If the rack is rusty, you may need to replace it.
    5. If the grill has a drip guard that prevents grease from getting onto the burners, it probably needs cleaning too. Lift it out (figure B) and place it in the tub.
    6. Use a spatula to scrape burnt-on grease from the inner walls of the grill.
    7. Use a wet/dry shop vacuum cleaner to remove the rest of the rocks, food particles and other debris from inside the gas grill.
    8. Now that you've removed everything from the grill cabinet, inspect the burner (figure C) and the cabinet body. If the burner appears damaged, replace it. If you notice rust in the cabinet, don't paint it--spread vegetable oil over it. The heat from the grill will bake the oil into the rust and prevent it from spreading.
    9. After the grills, rack and burner cover have soaked for an hour or so, remove them from the tub, and scrub them to remove baked-on grease. You can use a metal grill-cleaning brush on stainless-steel grills, but porcelain grills should be cleaned with plastic or nylon scouring pads: metal brushes could scratch the finish.

      If the grills are rusty, replace them. Consider a stainless steel or porcelain-finish grill, which won't rust and is easy to clean.

    10. When you're done cleaning, reassemble the grill. Protect the grill from the elements with a grill cover.

  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: