Many different models/colors to choose from. Pretty sure you can order online for free delivery to store if your store is out in your area. Some coupons may be able to be used too and/or PM at Home Depot for possibly even better pricing if that's your game.
Weber Genesis® S-320™ 3-Burner Stainless Steel Gas Grill Item #: 305696 | Model #: 3780001 $699.00 Was: $849.00
Weber Genesis® S-310™ 3-Burner Stainless Steel Gas Grill Item #: 88326 | Model #: 3770001 $649.00 Was: $799.00
Weber Genesis® E-320™ 3-Burner Black Gas Grill Item #: 110648 | Model #: 3751001 $549.00 Was: $699.00
Weber Genesis® E-310™ 3-Burner Black Gas Grill Item #: 273097 | Model #: 3741001 $499.00 Was: $649.00
Weber Genesis® E-320™ 3-Burner Black Natural Gas Grill Item #: 136496 | Model #: 3851001 $569.00 Was: $729.00
Weber Genesis® E-310™ 3-Burner Espresso Brown Natural Gas Grill Item #: 314365 | Model #: 3849099 $519.00 Was: $719.00
sleepybubba said:
Summit S-420 Natural Gas (don't remember the SKU) for $900 in-store. It was this much 2 weeks ago, so it may as well be less than that. LP could probably be the same but needs verification.
SalamiSincere said: Charcoal grills are better. The food tastes so much better after being cooked on a charcoal grill. There is a place for both gas and charcoal, and although I also happen to prefer the flavor of charcoal, that has no relevance to whether or not this is a hot deal.
Thank you for opening my eyes, Salami. I am about to throw my Summit S-420 off the stairs. Hopefully my garbage track takes it
On more serious note: OP please add Summit S-420 Natural Gas (don't remember the SKU) for $900 in-store. It was this much 2 weeks ago, so it may as well be less than that. LP could probably be the same but needs verification.
SalamiSincere said: Charcoal grills are better. The food tastes so much better after being cooked on a charcoal grill.
Just don't get these. The only one that doesn't look like it came from the Nixon era is the S-620, and I could get 4 or 5 other grills for that kinda dough. And before the weber heads jump on me saying "you'd have to do that, and the weber would last as long as those 5 combined" that's not really a plus to me, hell I'd get tired of seeing the same old gril for 20 years.
pjigar
Member
posted: Sep. 2, 2010 @ 2:31p
I am not a weber-head but my puny little 20" charcoal weber grill is going strong for 7 year in outdoor Texas patio. So weber deserves the credit for their rock solid quality.
quickNdirty said: Just don't get these. The only one that doesn't look like it came from the Nixon era is the S-620, and I could get 4 or 5 other grills for that kinda dough. And before the weber heads jump on me saying "you'd have to do that, and the weber would last as long as those 5 combined" that's not really a plus to me, hell I'd get tired of seeing the same old gril for 20 years.
Now that's the kind of good ol' American spirit that will pull us out of the recession. Throw out the out-of-style and buy a new one! Bravo, sir!
Back on topic, I wish there was a way to find out which stores actually had these in stock without having to search every zip code. I've tried most of the local stores, but since it will only check the five closest to your target zip code (and their site is horrifically slow) it's a painful process to expand the search.
Overzeetop said: quickNdirty said: Just don't get these. The only one that doesn't look like it came from the Nixon era is the S-620, and I could get 4 or 5 other grills for that kinda dough. And before the weber heads jump on me saying "you'd have to do that, and the weber would last as long as those 5 combined" that's not really a plus to me, hell I'd get tired of seeing the same old gril for 20 years.
Now that's the kind of good ol' American spirit that will pull us out of the recession. Throw out the out-of-style and buy a new one! Bravo, sir!
LOL, What frozen in time country are you from, Cuba?
quickNdirty said: And before the weber heads jump on me saying "you'd have to do that, and the weber would last as long as those 5 combined" that's not really a plus to me, hell I'd get tired of seeing the same old gril for 20 years. Your wife must be looking over her shoulder right about now, hoping your eye doesn't catch one of the "newer models."
I'd rather stick with the old reliable model that will be with you for 20+ years.
But of course, your name is "quickNdirty" for a reason.
For one person their Q model is fine, and the small surface area of burner hardly uses any fuel. I've used mine almost daily and the tank lasted for eight months.
LOL, What frozen in time country are you from, Cuba?
On the contrary, right here in the US of A. Certain things are a bargain when their just plain cheap (HDMI cables, for example). Other things are only a bargain if you'll use them often, and rely on them to always work without fail (say, my Taylor guitar). Disposable has it's place, and I'm not against it - I even buy the occasional tool at Harbor Freight - but this is one of those things I'd rather have that's going to have a long, useful, reliable life.
If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Finally bought one 6 months ago - the $600 was worth every penny of build quality over the $350 piece of garbage I had before. Really a well made product and if you haven't owned one you wouldn't understand, but glad I spent the money. (wish I had saved the $100)
Finally bought one 6 months ago - the $600 was worth every penny of build quality over the $350 piece of garbage I had before. Really a well made product and if you haven't owned one you wouldn't understand, but glad I spent the money. (wish I had saved the $100)
clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Grills are made of nothing more than tubes that run from a propane tank to a burner. The rest of it is a metal box and ceramic bricks. It is ridiculous to spend this much on a girl. I've had the same grill in my backyard for 20 years. It looks the same that it always has. I've replaced the glass on it twice. I repaint it every 5 years or so. I've replaced the burner on it once. Save your money for the meat you'll put inside of it. Anything more than $200 and you're decorating your backyard, not getting a better grill.
I'd recommend anyone with the tools and time to look into making your own grill. Your biggest expense is the burner.
freddyfoster said: clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Grills are made of nothing more than tubes that run from a propane tank to a burner. The rest of it is a metal box and ceramic bricks. It is ridiculous to spend this much on a girl. I've had the same grill in my backyard for 20 years. It looks the same that it always has. I've replaced the glass on it twice. I repaint it every 5 years or so. I've replaced the burner on it once. Save your money for the meat you'll put inside of it. Anything more than $200 and you're decorating your backyard, not getting a better grill.
I'd recommend anyone with the tools and time to look into making your own grill. Your biggest expense is the burner.
Says the guy still driving his 1987 Chevy Cavalier ...
freddyfoster said: clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Grills are made of nothing more than tubes that run from a propane tank to a burner. The rest of it is a metal box and ceramic bricks. It is ridiculous to spend this much on a girl. I've had the same grill in my backyard for 20 years. It looks the same that it always has. I've replaced the glass on it twice. I repaint it every 5 years or so. I've replaced the burner on it once. Save your money for the meat you'll put inside of it. Anything more than $200 and you're decorating your backyard, not getting a better grill.
I'd recommend anyone with the tools and time to look into making your own grill. Your biggest expense is the burner.
Love you long time, worth every penny you spend Joe.
skidmark said: freddyfoster said: clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Grills are made of nothing more than tubes that run from a propane tank to a burner. The rest of it is a metal box and ceramic bricks. It is ridiculous to spend this much on a girl. I've had the same grill in my backyard for 20 years. It looks the same that it always has. I've replaced the glass on it twice. I repaint it every 5 years or so. I've replaced the burner on it once. Save your money for the meat you'll put inside of it. Anything more than $200 and you're decorating your backyard, not getting a better grill.
I'd recommend anyone with the tools and time to look into making your own grill. Your biggest expense is the burner.
Says the guy still driving his 1987 Chevy Cavalier ...
One day he will buy a Weber to prove we're all stupid. And then he will say:
ALL those wasted years!! Actually seems his system is working for him, but I save that type of thing for bigger ticket items.
One day he will buy a Weber to prove we're all stupid. And then he will say:
ALL those wasted years!! Actually seems his system is working for him, but I save that type of thing for bigger ticket items.
Why don't I just buy the Weber burner and use that? Or are you actually saying the walls of the grill are magical?
The part that holds the burner lasts for decades, the hood is guaranteed for 25 years, their powdercoat on the frame is amazing, had a buddy whose dad left a genesis silver out in a field for 20 years, he just replaced the burners, grate, flavorizer bars and side tables (well he just made his own inserts) and he was good to go, the frame, hood and body looked great, the paint on the frame was faded a little.
That's amazing craftsmanship on the frame, not only didn't it rust, the powdercoat didn't even peel off after 20 years of setting in a field.
freddyfoster said: Why don't I just buy the Weber burner and use that? Or are you actually saying the walls of the grill are magical?
Short answer: Maybe.
If you value even cooking (and you should), then consider that convective airflow within the grill may play an important role in the cooking performance of the grill. A mismatch of burner and enclosure may not give you the expected performance.
freddyfoster said: clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.
Grills are made of nothing more than tubes that run from a propane tank to a burner. The rest of it is a metal box and ceramic bricks. It is ridiculous to spend this much on a girl. I've had the same grill in my backyard for 20 years. It looks the same that it always has. I've replaced the glass on it twice. I repaint it every 5 years or so. I've replaced the burner on it once. Save your money for the meat you'll put inside of it. Anything more than $200 and you're decorating your backyard, not getting a better grill.
I'd recommend anyone with the tools and time to look into making your own grill. Your biggest expense is the burner.
I have my Weber for 17 years now. They don't need any ceramic bricks or lava rocks, never had to paint it nor replaced anything until this year when I replaced the grates because I stupidly left the lid open one rainy day and it started rusting. The company still makes grates and other parts for all their products even the one they sold decades ago. In a time when many companies are only interested in selling you their products with no intention to support it after they get your money, I will buy another Weber the next time. Too bad, my 17 years old one is still working great.
Fant
Member
posted: Sep. 2, 2010 @ 9:47p
Just pulled the trigger on genesis e-310 natural gas black ... $519 + tax ... looking online have never seen it that low ... even with sales.
clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.Another FW'er posted a tip on how to make even a cheap grill last many years. Use high-temp grill paint (Lowes, HD) on the inside bottom of the grill. Water & oils that drip down and sit there cause the quickest rusting. Cover up the nozzles (I used painters tape) and spray everything that the food doesn't touch (i.e. the main grill pad).
A 20-yr old grill not rusting is impressive. But in this day & age with cost cutting everywhere, are you certain that today's Weber model will still last that long?
Fant said: Just pulled the trigger on genesis e-310 natural gas black ... $519 + tax ... looking online have never seen it that low ... even with sales.
Congrats, you'll be happy with it. I bought a Genesis Gold C six years ago and haven't had to do anything except clean out the burners once. I got it from Amazon for $430 at the time, it arrived just before Thanksgiving. My Nephew and I put it together in the snow and I cooked two 9 pound turkeys on the rotisserie with it. They were excellent. I never even cover my Genesis. It sets out in the weather all year round, the back deck is boiling hot with no overhang and it sees rain, snow, sleet, heat, and sun. Still looks great, no rust.
peas said: clearanceman said: If you look at prices of Weber grills, they look ridiculously high. But they can go six years setting outside with no parts and the main parts of the grill will last 20 years outside. You'll go through several cheap grills long before you go through one Weber.Another FW'er posted a tip on how to make even a cheap grill last many years. Use high-temp grill paint (Lowes, HD) on the inside bottom of the grill. Water & oils that drip down and sit there cause the quickest rusting. Cover up the nozzles (I used painters tape) and spray everything that the food doesn't touch (i.e. the main grill pad).
A 20-yr old grill not rusting is impressive. But in this day & age with cost cutting everywhere, are you certain that today's Weber model will still last that long?
It's not the body, the body is heavy aluminum it should last forever. It's the enameled parts, they just don't ever seem to rust or peel. I had a weber kettle grill one time, the grates rusted completely out of it and the kettle still looked great. I think Weber is still made in USA so I would expect the new ones to hold up too.
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