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The main difference between a propane stove and a natural gas stove is the type of gas they use. Propane stoves use propane gas, which is stored in tanks, while natural gas stoves use natural gas that comes through a pipeline. The two gases have different compositions and pressures, so the stoves are designed to work with their specific gas source.
Burning a fuel is a chemical change. Two or more substances are combined and new substances are produced with different properties than the original substances. In other words the gas and oxygen in the air are combined to form carbon dioxide and smoke.
No. you have to change the nozzles for the burners and for the stove portion. The replacement nozzles generally come on the rear of the stove upper right or left corner on a small 2" strip. the nozzles are small with 6flat sides to allow tightening with a wrench. to gain access to the nozzles for the range top generally you have to lift the top,remove the burner, unscrew the propane nozzle and attach the natural gas nozzle. the natural gas nozzle has a larger orifice to allow the gas to pass through to the actual burner. the stove is a bit more complicated but can be done by anyone who is semi mechanically inclined.
Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) is natural gas which has undergone a phase change from gas to liquid in order to reduce volume so that it may be economically exported across international borders.
Yes, you will save money on your heating and cooking bills by switching to natural gas. Natural gas is much cheaper to use. The majority of gas appliance now have electronic ignitions for their pilot lights so the using natural gas will cost you even less.
When natural gas is producing red flames it usually means there is not enough oxygen (air) mixed with the methane (natural gas). This causes incomplete burning. It can produce carbon monoxide, so if this is happening in your home you should borrow someone's home carbon monoxide tester immediately.
Hi, Good question you have there and I for one am glad you asked it. Your system will burn way way rich air fuel ratio mixture as that LP gas requires much smaller jetting simply because its heat output per given volume is roughly 3 times that of natural gas. Be careful with any kind of fuel in your home, (especially) LP fuel. I have seen houses blown completely off their slabs and foundations because of a fuel leak matched with some form of spark. ( Usually an electronic furnace ignitor ) NOT ALWAYS,,,, but, you get the point. Have your LP supplier to rejet your furnace and set it up for you. Usually if you are changing over to their fuel they do it at nominal prices and sometimes nothing. Hope this helps: Jimiwane
Gas stoves were the most common before electric stoves. Electric stoves came around in the 1930's. The electric stove is more common nowadays, but has yet to replace the gas stove. So to answer your question more directly: They have not replaced anything.
All steam is natural. It is created when water is boiled. Water can be boiled using a variety of methods, but man cannot violate the laws of nature in doing so. Lighting a gas stove with a match, then using the flame to boil water and create steam is an entirely natural process.
Natural gas and propane are crompressed at different pressures so the require differnt orifices for burners to meter the gas. There are some logistical problems, natural gas tanks are much bulkier than propane and are much less convenient to refill and weigh more for equal volume, this is the reason campers run on propane. Also, hooking to your house gas if you were able to change the orifice would seem dangerous, most CNG things in your house are effectively permanent (water heater, stove, dryer) they arent outside and the dont move. Could you convert it? Yes. Would it be worth the time, effort, and risk? No
Natural gas IS a gas, so there is no way it can turn "back" into a gas. Traditional combustion reactions result in CO2 and H2O, and the combustion of natural gas would be no different.
It is in air- it is a gas. So, yes it is a fuel.