Zu Inhalt springen

Yoder Smokers 20" Loaded Wichita Offset Smoker

Ausverkauft
Ursprünglicher Preis $2,899.00 - Ursprünglicher Preis $2,899.00
Ursprünglicher Preis
$2,899.00
$2,899.00 - $2,899.00
Aktueller Preis $2,899.00
Currently Out of Stock — Email Us or Call 913-782-5171 and we'll let you know when it's back.

As an authorized dealer, we often receive units before public inventory updates. Add your details below and our team will personally confirm the next shipment timing and availability.

Request Freight Quote

A Generational Offset Platform

The Loaded Wichita is a fully realized offset smoker platform designed to deliver the control, consistency, and durability that define serious wood-fired cooking. Built for those who prefer a true stick burner, this pit gives you direct command over fire, airflow, and smoke, the essential elements of traditional barbecue.

Built in Kansas and shaped by decades of hands-on pit building, the Loaded Wichita reflects a standard earned over time and refined through real-world use. As an American-made offset smoker, it carries forward a legacy of craftsmanship while meeting the expectations of today’s pitmaster.

Engineered for Consistent Wood-Fired Performance

At its core, the Loaded Wichita is a traditional offset smoker with a firebox, designed to burn real wood or charcoal and produce clean, thin blue smoke. A taller exhaust stack improves airflow and draft efficiency, helping maintain a steady burn and more even temperatures across the cook chamber.

A removable heat management plate adds another level of control, giving you the flexibility to create a more even cooking environment or remove it entirely for higher heat and increased airflow.

  • Create a more balanced cooking environment across the chamber
  • Remove the plate for higher heat and stronger airflow
  • Run hot-and-fast cooks when needed
  • Establish distinct temperature zones for different cuts of meat

Constructed from 1/4-inch steel, this backyard offset smoker is built for thermal stability, holding heat through long cooks and responding predictably to fire management adjustments.

Inside, 304 stainless steel cooking grates and a flexible two-piece second shelf provide durability and capacity for everything from single briskets to full loads.

Built for Real-World Use and Movement

The Loaded Wichita is designed to perform beyond a fixed position. A redesigned stand paired with front casters creates a stable, maneuverable platform, allowing you to position the pit where it works best for your space, your cook, and your workflow.

  • Redesigned stand for improved stability
  • Front casters for easier movement and positioning
  • Removable front shelf for added workspace
  • Balanced structure for better control while repositioning

Whether you are adjusting for wind, clearing space, or setting up for a long cook, this wood smoker is built with mobility as a core consideration.

From long overnight cooks to weekend gatherings, the Loaded Wichita delivers the control, durability, and flexibility expected from a modern stick-burning smoker. It is a platform built for serious barbecue today and designed to be passed down to the next generation.

  • American Made in Kansas, USA
  • Door Counterweight
  • Stay Cool Handles
  • Dual Door Temperature Gauges
  • Integrated Probe Port
  • Grease Drain
  • Pot Warmer
  • Offset Firebox
  • 2nd Level Slide-Out Shelf
  • Heat Management Plate
  • Log Grate
  • Wagon Wheels
  • Expanded Metal Front Shelves
  • Ash Cleanout Tool
  • Warranty
  • User Manual
  • Dimensional Drawing

Cooking Surface: 1,610 sq. in. total — Two 19.8″×19″ cooking grates + 35.5″×14.5″ 2nd level slide-out shelf + 19″×18″ firebox cooking grate
Chamber Thickness: 1/4 inch steel
Overall Length: 77.9″
Overall Height: 58.2″
Overall Depth: 34.5″ (including front shelf)
Weight: 591 lbs.
Fuel Type: Wood / Charcoal (offset firebox)
Construction: 1/4-inch steel cooking chamber; 304 stainless steel cooking grates

Optional Accessories

Upgrades Available at Build

  • Square Firebox w/ Boiler Style Door (Wichita)
  • Stainless Steel Front Shelf
  • Insulated Square Firebox w/ Boiler-style Door (Wichita)
  • Chrome Stack with Internal Damper
  • YS Counterweight Sign (Wichita)

Common Questions About This Product

Frequently Asked Questions

1: How does an offset smoker work?

An offset smoker consist of the firebox (the smaller box), the cooking chamber where most of the cooking takes place. You begin by building a fire in the firebox, the heat then flows out from the firebox, through the cooking chamber and out the chimney. You control the burn (combustion) rate and the heat produced primarily by the main butterfly damper on the firebox door. To a lesser degree the damper on the chimney is also used to fine tune the heat in the cooking chamber.

2: How is an offset smoker different than a vertical or rear firebox design?

Here is the short answer: vertical and rear firebox designs are fueled by large amounts of slow burning charcoal with wood chunks added for flavor. Offset smokers are fueled by a small hot fire with wood being the preferred source for both fuel and flavor.

3: Can I grill and smoke on an offset smoker?

Yes, there are three ways that you can cook on an offset cooker:
Grill direct. This is done by building a charcoal fire directly below the cooking grates and grill directly over the coals. A grill grate is provided for the firebox and an optional charcoal grate can be added to covert the cooking chamber to a direct grill.
Grill indirectly. This is accomplished by building a fire in the firebox and running the dampers toward the open position. This creates an excellent indirect grilling area on the firebox half of the cooking chamber.
Smoking. This technique is accomplished just like indirect grilling except that the temperature is held at or below 275-degrees.

4: How thick is the metal?

All Yoder Smokers wood pits are produced from new 3⁄16″ or 1⁄4″ steel pipe & plate.

5: How do you keep the heat and smoke in the pit?

All Yoder Smokers offset pits are fully welded, no stitch welding around the doors. In addition the cooking chamber door is strapped with ¼” x 1″ material and is fully welded to the door further reducing leakage around the door.

6: Are the cooking and the charcoal/wood grates removable?

The heavy gauge stainless steel cooking grates and firebox grates are removable.

7: What options are available?

In backyard offset pits the primary options are the heat management plate (HMP), cooking door counterweight (20″ pits), second shelf and the cooking chamber charcoal grate.

8: How does the heat management plate work?

The heat management plate installs against the common wall of the firebox and the cooking chamber. The design forces the heat and smoke to enter the pit under the plate and is then released incrementally as it travels across the pit. This design reduces the side to side temperature variance by more than half.

9: What type of wood should I use?

Wood selection is a matter of the cook’s taste so we have included some basic guidelines to help in your selection. To begin with a wood that is going to be used should be either fruit or nut bearing. Typical smoking woods include apple, cherry, oak, pecan, hickory and mesquite. The fruit woods produce a mild flavor with a slightly sweet finish. The oaks and other hard woods produce a heartier smoke flavor, while pecan can end with a hint of sweet the other hard woods do not. Besides flavor wood will also influence the color of the meat, for instance, some pit-masters like to mix cherry and pecan which produces a cherry like color on the bark and a robust smoke flavor with a slightly sweet finish. The list isn’t all inclusive; certainly numerous other fruit woods are excellent choices as well.

The other consideration when selecting wood is seasoned vs. green. Most experienced pit-masters choose seasoned wood. Seasoned wood burns more predictably, which contributes to a clean burning fire and in turn minimizes temperature spikes making pit management easier.

10: Charcoal VS wood?

Small offset pits can be run with charcoal as the primary heat source and wood chunks for flavor. Most offset cooks prefer split wood as the source for both the heat and flavor.

11: Logs VS chunks?

Again, most offset cooks use split wood.

12: How do I build the fire?

Begin with the firebox lid, main damper and chimney damper in the open position, this will increase airflow and speed the fire building process. Most offset cooks start with a charcoal base. Once you have a hot bed of charcoal close the lid and place two pieces of wood onto the coal base. As the wood reduces to coal close both dampers to the halfway position to allow the pit temperature to begin to rise. Once the pit stabilizes at the desired temperature, add one piece of flavor wood and the meat and you are off and cooking.

13: How often do I maintain my fire?

Expect to add one 14 – 16″ small split log to the fire every hour or so. The key to excellent color and a savory smoke infused flavor is running a small hot fire. When the fire is running efficiently you will have a thin light colored smoke coming from the stack. NOTE: a heavy white smoke indicates that you are smoldering not efficiently burning the wood. This will put a dark color and a harsh taste on your meat.

14: How do I control temperature?

Once the pit is stabilized and up to the desired temperature, pit temp is controlled by the amount of fuel you add at any given time and the position of the primary damper on the firebox.

15: How do you season a new pit?

Build a fire in the firebox utilizing any smoking wood, run the unit at 250+ degrees for 3 to 5 hours. The pit is seasoned and ready to cook on when a thin black sheen has developed on the interior surfaces.

16: How much wood will I need for a cook?

On a Yoder quality 16″ or 20″ offset an average 10-hour cook will consume less than 1 cubic foot of wood.

17: When is my pit ready to cook on?

It typically takes 45-minutes to get a coal bed built and for the steel in the pit to come up to the desired cooking temperature. Once this happens the pit is ready to cook on.

18: What about temperature evenness?

A traditional low and slow offset pits run hotter at the firebox end and cooler at the chimney end. This is one of the offsets greatest strengths; the heat is progressive from end to end and is predictable from cook to cook. This lends itself perfectly to cooking different cuts of meat at the same time. Want to load the pit up with briskets or butts? Drop the Heat Management Plate into position and the temperature becomes fairly even from end to end.

19: How do you clean the firebox?

Each pit is delivered with an ash clean-out tool that is shaped to quickly and easily remove the ash from the firebox.

20: Cooking in winter?

You can successfully cook on Yoder Smokers in any weather condition.

21: How long will the smoker last?

That’s the easy one, for a lifetime, guaranteed.

22: Where are Yoder Smokers built?

Yoder Smokers are design, test and built in the USA.

{"statementLink":"","footerHtml":"","hideMobile":false,"hideTrigger":false,"disableBgProcess":false,"language":"en","position":"left","leadColor":"#146ff8","triggerColor":"#146ff8","triggerRadius":"50%","triggerPositionX":"right","triggerPositionY":"bottom","triggerIcon":"people","triggerSize":"medium","triggerOffsetX":20,"triggerOffsetY":20,"mobile":{"triggerSize":"small","triggerPositionX":"right","triggerPositionY":"bottom","triggerOffsetX":10,"triggerOffsetY":10,"triggerRadius":"50%"}}