Yes!If you put enough charcoal in only a small amount falls out.keep a water bucket nearby in case a grass fire starts from fallen charcoals. The charcoal probably will clog the gas jets and ignitor after awhile. Besides, the flavor comes from the drippings hitting the hot surfaces, not the charcoal. Not recommended.
Lava briquettes
Briquettes come in different forms and types. There are biomass briquettes, charcoal briquettes, wood (or sawdust) briquettes, ceramic briquettes and peat briquettes. The ceramic briquettes are most commonly used in gas grills. It appears that the sawdust briquettes are the easiest to light.
BBQ briquettes are made by compressing a mixture of charcoal, wood dust, binders, and sometimes additives. The process begins with the carbonization of wood materials to create charcoal, which is then ground into a fine powder. This powder is mixed with binders like starch and water, formed into shapes, and then dried to remove moisture. Finally, the briquettes are packaged for use in grilling and barbecuing.
A gas BBQ grill is easier to use, and is more convenient, but a charcoal grill will give you a smoky flavor, which cannot be achieved by using a gas BBQ. Gas BBQs are also safer than charcoal grills.
Charcoal briquettes are a solid material. When they are burned in a barbecue, they produce heat and light by undergoing a chemical reaction known as combustion, but the briquettes themselves remain in solid form throughout the process.
You can find reviews for a gas bbq grill at www.bbqs.com. They provide expert advice and sell accessories for the modern barbecue. You can find everything you need and more.
You should use propane gas for your BBQ grill.
Public parks will not off gas grills for liability (public safety) and gas supply reasons. So if your going to use the public parks supplied BBQ, bring the charcoal, and the meat.
The best person to talk to about reviews on a gas BBQ is the people who sell the units. They can give you all the spec's on there BBQ's and may also have testimonials from people who have bought BBQ's from them. Another good way is to talk with people who love to BBQ. and have experience with indoor units.
Propane
Propane, LPG, or natural gas (methane)
Yes considering BBQ does create carcinogens it can be considered carcinogenic