These were posted last week at £10 I bought one and used it. Well worth the money especially now at £9 for anyone who missed it.
Ring your local branch to confirm stock product code is 0077924073939.
All comments (21)
HUBBATWO
19 Aug 16#1
Great item I was lucky enough to buy one of these from Argos a short while ago for £4.75. Great addition to the BBQ setup, easy to use and keeps the mess down. IMO still worth the B&Q price of £9:00.
speric07
19 Aug 16#2
The Peterborough store had the kit version of these, chimney starter, 2kg of charcoal and fire lighters for £14. None of the £9 ones though.
Munkee
19 Aug 16#3
Any idea how much the Starter kits are ?
Satty1981
19 Aug 16#4
It's far easier & cheaper to light these with scrunched up newspaper than to use firelighters, BUT it gets VERY smoky for around 10 mins, best to light it & close all nearby Windows & remove any washing on the line.
bamshopper to Satty1981
19 Aug 16#9
That happened with me and I removed some coal from the top and the smoking cut right down. Maybe best to try adding a bit more coal as it heats up?
KlausHeissler197 to Satty1981
19 Aug 16#18
The Webber cubes are fantastic.
loofer
19 Aug 16#5
What's the normal price of these?
Suggests £12 odd
speric07 to loofer
19 Aug 161#6
Usually about £17
afroylnt
19 Aug 16#7
Having looked at the photo my cheap non-branded one is easiwr to use as I can more easily put small sticks through the bigger holes that it has at the bottom. So far my cheap one has lasted over 3 years.
Have to admit the Webber one looks better though...
scaryprowler
19 Aug 16#8
heat! you need one of these if you bbq with charcoal or briquettes!
weber ones are more robust than most. I have the Homebase one also, but it's not going to last and has an inferior false bottom. Beauty with this one is that you can turn it upside down and use it for a small batch of coal
VinnyVincenzo
19 Aug 16#10
Exactly, that is the way to fire it up, use a small amount of charcoal first, light that with a couple of firefighters and
then keep adding to it, limits the amount of smoke.
utopiangames
19 Aug 16#11
Brilliant bit of kit and you only need 1 firelighter!
Weber coals are great also, not found anything that comes close yet.
RUSNAFU
19 Aug 16#12
Just picked one of these up for £5.00 at B&Q Eastwood in clearance.
1 left on shelf.
dave7
19 Aug 16#13
Just use a heat gun to get the fire going. No stinky kerosine or cancer causing burnt paper smoke
eagleian to dave7
20 Aug 16#20
I use one of those torches you get for cooking. Stick the brickets in the webber starter and point the torch through the holes.
looftlighters are good too.
ro53ben
19 Aug 161#14
Not a need, but most people would benefit I guess. I don't need one at all.
Incidentally, massive advantage on the Weber chimney is the second handle. Makes it much safer to pour.
Opening post
Ring your local branch to confirm stock product code is 0077924073939.
All comments (21)
Suggests £12 odd
Have to admit the Webber one looks better though...
weber ones are more robust than most. I have the Homebase one also, but it's not going to last and has an inferior false bottom. Beauty with this one is that you can turn it upside down and use it for a small batch of coal
then keep adding to it, limits the amount of smoke.
Weber coals are great also, not found anything that comes close yet.
1 left on shelf.
looftlighters are good too.
Incidentally, massive advantage on the Weber chimney is the second handle. Makes it much safer to pour.