What Excess Smoke means (dcs grill too much smoke)
dcs grill too much smoke describes a DCS grill producing far more smoke than normal grilling should. DCS outdoor grills are fully mechanical — they light with a spark or flame igniter and have no electronic control board, so they never display a numeric error code. Problems show up as symptoms you observe at the grill rather than as coded faults. Excess smoke is almost always burning grease build-up rather than a fault, though the smoker or charcoal tray accessory can also add smoke by design.
Symptoms to look for
The signs below help confirm you are dealing with this condition rather than a different fault on your DCS Grill. You may see one of them or several together, and they can build up gradually or appear suddenly after a spill, a power event, or recent service.
- Heavy smoke even with lean food
- Acrid rather than clean smoke
- Smoke worst on first light after a few cooks
- Visible grease residue burning off
Common causes
Several different faults can produce these symptoms. Working through the most likely causes in order helps separate a quick, owner-level fix from a problem that needs trained service and the correct DCS parts.
- Grease build-up — old grease on grates, tamers, and firebox burns off
- Full grease tray — pooled fat smokes
- Smoker/charcoal tray in use — intentional smoke from the accessory
- Food residue — carbonized debris on the grates
Troubleshooting steps you can try
Work through these checks in order with the appliance cool and powered down before touching any internal part. Stop wherever you are unsure, or where gas, high heat, or live electrical parts are involved, and hand the rest to a qualified technician.
- Burn off and brush the grates, then clean the flame tamers and firebox.
- Empty the grease tray and Grease Management pan.
- Remove the smoker/charcoal tray if you are not intending to smoke.
- Run the grill empty on high briefly to clear residue.
Parts a technician may replace
Depending on what the diagnosis shows, a technician may inspect, test, or replace the grease tray, smoker/charcoal tray, burner area, and grates. The correct part for your DCS Grill is matched from the model and serial number, and genuine DCS components are fitted rather than generic substitutes so that performance, safety, and the appliance’s long working life are all protected. Confirming the failed part before ordering avoids replacing more than the fault actually requires.
When to call a technician
Excess smoke is a cleaning matter; service is only needed if a burner is burning incorrectly (see the yellow-flame page). When the fix calls for trained service, book a visit through our scheduling page and our certified technicians will diagnose and repair it. For factory documentation and model lookup, see the manufacturer at dcsappliances.com.
Prevention and care
Regular care keeps this condition from returning on your DCS Grill. Clean spills and grease before they bake on, keep ports, filters, and vents clear, and follow the DCS maintenance schedule for your model. Because the controls here are mechanical rather than electronic, the most reliable prevention is consistent cleaning and an occasional professional service that catches wear before it becomes a breakdown. Note when a symptom first appeared and what you were cooking at the time, because that detail often points a technician straight to the cause and keeps the repair simple.
Related help and DCS resources
Browse other DCS Grill diagnostics, read about professional DCS Grill repair, look up your unit on the DCS models reference, or the related yellow flame page, or schedule a service visit.