Have you seen the new rescue brush designed to work with grill grates? I think this would clean the wire racks better even without grill grates.
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I’ve used the original (flat) version on my griddle, and it works really well. I’d think the biggest challenge on grates would be not all of them are spaced equally. Oh, and as a FYI you will need a dishwasher to get them clean. We have one, don’t use it, so that is another challenge.Have you seen the new rescue brush designed to work with grill grates? I think this would clean the wire racks better even without grill grates.
I know not to use it when the grill is hot. Don’t ask me how I know, haha. The original Grill Grates brush sold on their site works very well and can handle moderate (less than 350F) temperatures very well.
If it is the one I am thinking, yes. It was designed for grates but unfortunately, there is a limit to how “hot”, hot can be. It started wet but at higher temps, it dried out then started to become my next BBQ meal. I blame myself as the temps on my Lynx can hit 1100F, although it was around 375F at the time. They have devices that use steam/hot water for cleaning grates and for me it was just meh. I’ve pretty much given up and use either the aluminum foil, an onion, or woven wire brush for cleaning. Periodically, I hit them with the power washer at 2000psi. The grates on my cheapest cooker are at least 5/8” and they are all stainless steel. My friends claim I am washing off the seasoning, but they sure look good after a good cleaning. (YMMV)Is this for the grill rescue brush? I thought the whole idea was to have the grill hot and wet the brush to create steam.