Thanks for the info. I was just looking at Bayou Classics, and they have some good burners. Any thoughts on the following double and triple burners, respectively from Bayou Classics: Bayou Classic Double Burner and Bayou Classic Triple Burner.
These burners can hold two and three 60 gal kettles, respectively. I think that would cover anything I would want. I'm thinking of a 32 qt stainless kettle. Purchasing these will have to wait several months.
I plan to my go ahead and use a cooler for a MLT. I will look into brew in a bag.
I think I can do AG using my stove and two kettles. I will collect the first and second runnings from the tun in a 8 gal bucket. I'll shoot for 5-6 gal of wort from the tun. I'll pour halve in each of my kettles. I'll boil each and divide my hops evenly between the two. I should have enough head-space, and my stove will be able to handle the boil. I'll chill each in my usual ice bath and be good to ferment. Does this make sense?
Can't wait to get the new kettle and burner.
What I do is use my old, smaller kettles on the stove for sparge water, and the 36 quart kettle and single burner outside for the initial mash water and boil. That way I can start the stuff boiling after the first runnings.
One thing about the burners -- if you want more than one, you may want to consider whether you will do gravity feed or not. Buying a two burner system with a stand and both at the same height means an expensive pump will be in your future. OTOH, you can pick up SP-10 burners for $39 ea. and put them on your own stands (like one on a table, and one on the ground). Full boils are not easy to move around in 5.5 gallon batches and pretty much impossible in larger ones.