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Yes gas and electic stoves do emit carbon monoxide, a stove left on to much and to often may cause light sickness.
Yes, it is very possible.
It is your choice but of caution it is recommended.
Carbon monoxide is produced when things are on fire.
Yes and no. When wood burns, the first thing that happens is destructive distillation, and one of the products is carbon monoxide. The carbon monoxide is normally burned into carbon dioxide, producing a flame, along with other products of destructive distillation. Then the products of combustion go up the chimney. An airtight stove can produce carbon monoxide as a combustion product if it is not allowed to get enough air to burn properly. Older airtight stoves were more prone to this than newer. The carbon monoxide went up the chimney, and not into the house, but it was an atmospheric pollutant. In a case where the carbon monoxide fails to go up the chimney, a stove will normally just go out. There are exceptional cases where this would not happen, but proper operation of a stove would prevent it.
== == Yes!
Not necessarily; it depends on exactly what the problem is. Carbon monoxide is produced by incomplete combustion, which could conceivably be a problem with the oven burners but not the stove top burners. However, given that carbon monoxide is colorless, odorless, and deadly, you should probably have it checked over by a qualified technician just to be certain
The pilot light of a stove can go out for various reasons, but for it to go out frequently can be hazardous due to gas buildup. One of the most common reasons is draftiness, and another is a damaged pilot light supply line.?æ
a complete flame or a blue flame
You can but it just has to be done manually..
To remain in a sealed room having a stove with coal, methane, also wood.
These kind of pollutants are called fumaroles which are released by the form of fumes - (Carbon monoxide (CO) )