Weber Bros Metal Works Ads From 1954.....

Started by harris92, July 22, 2015, 04:30:31 PM

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harris92

@Troy @Craig

Found in in an outdoor cooking pamphlet.   :)


August 1954...  NICE.



The Garden Light....  Mentions Weber Bros Metal Works & Standard Lamp and Novelty Company.  They probably worked in conjunction to make these.



Old kettle (BK-500) with no axle and electric spit



jkolantern


Jeff

Very nice. That one grill looks like ernie's grill!
Kettle collector AND cooker!

harris92

This is the model variation prior to Ernie's grill.  No wheel axle on the 1954 model.

ClubChapin


Craig


Quote from: harris92 on July 22, 2015, 05:03:16 PM
This is the model variation prior to Ernie's grill.  No wheel axle on the 1954 model.

He's right. There's an 1994 issue of Webers newsletter "The Grill Out Times" that features this kettle with no axle. One of the legs had loosened over the years and the wheel was turned inward. It was deemed "the oldest" known Weber that was still "out there". I've been hoping that whomever owns it someday finds out about us and shares it on here. I need to find the link to that page. Incidentally it also shows a '56 modern dome lid with a giant homemade twist disc ash pan the original owner and his son had made together sometime in the 60s or 70s. It was pretty neat!

Craig

Incidentally they talk about how Weber didnt make the "axle-less" kettles for vary long for the stability reason mentioned above.


Craig


Quote from: harris92 on July 23, 2015, 08:16:13 AM
@Craig



That's the one! I wonder where that one is today? Hopefully not forgotten and in a landfill somewhere...

Matt_T

Keep it simple stupid

einrej

Family, 1954-55 Weber Bros Metal Works Kettle,
1979 A-code Redhead 22, 1983 E-code Black 22, & a Rowley Miracle Fire Maker

Craig

I always love seeing the flattie lid 22 einrej! Definitely hope to find one some day. I wonder if pizzas would do well on these since the topping would be closer to the roof of the lid? Would eliminate having to use a raised grate maybe? Cheese tends to get the nice leopard spotting when close to the lid.

Idahawk

 Any chance those are some sort of stem caster / wheel assembly on the 1954s pictured ? It's funny both the image and the real photo show the wheels in strange positions .


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Wanted plum/burgundy 18.5
WTB Color Copies of old Weber Catalogs

charred

hopelessly, helplessly, happily addicted to a shipload of Webers

Craig

#14
Quote from: Idahawk on July 23, 2015, 03:24:10 PM
Any chance those are some sort of stem caster / wheel assembly on the 1954s pictured ? It's funny both the image and the real photo show the wheels in strange positions .


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From what I read about these, it was just an early wheeled production model with the legs held in with thumbscrews like we are familiar with. Besides the lack of an axle, the rear legs aren't even flanged like on Ernie's grill. They mentioned in that article that Weber knew a very short time into that design that a support axle would be needed to prevent wheel legs from turning in or outward.