Thanks for this. I'm in Toronto, Canada.
I can get the 310 grill surface to about 500/550 (maybe) if it's very hot out, which is about 2-3 months per year. The CI grates rusted out and so now I'm using SS with GrillGrates on top. I haven't noticed much difference with CI and post-CI.
The 310 does a nice job with chicken, pork, fish, veggies, and hot dogs and usually burgers. I've made a whole turkey on it for Thanksgiving (ours, in October) and it held the temps very well.
The 310 can't do seared steak or tuna or swordfish very well.
I wish I remembered or knew the specifics of the Genesis 1000 I had previously. That was pre me discovering this wonderful world of Weber fanatics.
Now that I have a kettle for the weekends, this has become less of an issue for me, but it's still not my favorite BBQ.
That doesn't mean I wouldn't be interested in selling mine and getting something else, even older.
They are slightly different grills in the Q is more of a sear-based cooker as the heavy grate is places closed to the burner and it's meant to absorb the heat, then transfer that heat to the meat via conduction. The Genesis has those thick CI grates so you still get some of that conduction on top or radiant heat from the burner/flavorizer. Can you elaborate more on your temp issues? How hot does the grill actually get? Are you preheating it sufficiently? Did your Genesis 1000 have the dual layer flavorizer setup? If so, that firebox would retain heat better and you'll notice that it will cook "hotter". Long story short, I wouldn't get rid of the Genesis II E-310 for a Q3200. I think the build quality is crap on the Genesis II so personally I wouldn't hesitate to swap it for an older grill of higher quality. Where are you located? There are great deals to be had on old Genesis/Summits if you keep an eye out.
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