You may be able to get away with powering a natural gas stove or LPG stove on this wattage because it doesn't use heavy amperage to pull the surface ignitor to 1200 degrees or to run the sparkers which are only lit momentarily, however on an electric stove you would need 1000 watts or 3000 watts if you're trying to use a power converter off a 12v battery or something of that nature. It's probably not a good idea. You need a good 220 outlet for an electric stove.
Of course, this will vary with the manufacturer(s). A typical small pellet stove with a combustion fan and a circulation fan will need 500 watts or more to start. After is it started, it will typically take around 150 watts to run.
Normally speaking, a 3500 watt generator can typically power appliances such as refrigerator (500-800 watts), laptop (50-100 watts), television (100-400 watts), stereo system (200-400 watts), air conditioner (1,000-2,000 watts), electric stove (1,000-2,500 watts), lights (50-100 watts). It's important to check the specific power requirements of your appliances as they can vary.
No, it could be dangerous.
A stove wattage usually ranges from 4000-6500, depending on the type of stove.
4 ohms
Typical for a normal average stove: 2000 watts for the oven and each of the large rings, 1500 watts for each of the small rings and the grill. These are the max values, but when the thermosts operates in the oven, for example, it might draw power for only 20% of the time.
Depends on the wattage of the cooler. 800 watts would be a small cooler I think. You need to check the cooler specification before connecting it to the inverter.
A typical microwave is 750-800 watts. There are lower (and higher) power machines, but the 'normal' for general use is 750-800 watts.
A Watt is a measurement of electrical power, a gas stove has none.
no
800
Most hair dryers are rated at least 800 watts to as much as 1875 watts. Given that, a 500 watt generator will NOT run a hair dryer. You would need at least a 2000 watt generator, just be be on the safe side.