Want this question answered?
There's not enough air (oxygen) in the gas-air mix. Often gas stoves have an adjustment that allows you to adjust the mix. Adjust the mix until the flame is entirely or almost entirely free of yellow.
on your throttle body, where the air enters the engine. there is a flap that sets inside to controle the air flow with your gas pedal. on the outside of your throttle there is a little set screw that you can adjust your idle with. hope this can help
Improper gas/air mixture.
Lights when the gas flow is small and only then adjust the flow from the source as desired. Also adjust the burner with the rotating the barrel.
there is probably copper being burned somewhere on/in the stove copper is really the only thing that can turn a flame green
Change out the gas flow orifice size to propane and adjust the gas valve.
The four types of air flow patterns are up flow, down flow, low boy, and horizontal
It's an anesthesia bag that has a gas source, and attached to a mask where the anesthesiologist can adjust the flow rate.... so you don't get all the "gas" all at once.
Convection - Hot air circulating from a heater Conduction - A hot stove with a pan on it Radiation - A hot stove
To adjust gas flow therefore adjusting flame intensity.
The Gas Stove uses a spark to start a flame, and that's what cooks the food.
There are two adjustable parts on the Bunsen burner, the knob to control gas flow and the rotation of the collar to control air flow. The gas flow control, adjusts the size of the flame by controlling how much gas is burned. While the collar controls the intensity of the flame by controlling how completely the gas burns, more complete combustion the hotter the flame. These are the two parts to adjust a Bunsen burner, I hope I have answered your question.