Might be low gas pressure or might be a plugged orfice. Don't fool around with gas unless you know what you are doing. Call a professional.
IF you have a woodburning fireplace, and there is a small door- about 6 inches square on the outside of the house, check for a flip open door on the floor of your fireplace. If that is what you have, this is not a vent, but an ash clean-out. Shovel ashes thru the door on the floor of the fireplace, and you can remove them from the outside door without making a mess in the house. But not a vent. If that is not what you have, please post gain with a more detailed description.
Yes but the flame would have to be hot enough to boil water which is 100ºC(212ºF).
Rub your hands with a rag with a small amount of gas on it. Do not do this near any open flame or even cigarettes. Dispose of the rag safely afterwards.
Basically, they are pretty much the same, but slightly different. A blaze is a small flame or rather what someone would call a weak fire. And fire... is fire.
If you lit a hazelnut on fire, it would undergo combustion, producing flames and releasing heat. The nut's outer shell and oils within would contribute to the burning process, resulting in a small, relatively short-lived flame.
If holding the controls in the LIGHT position for about 15-30 seconds does not keep your pilot lit, there is probably a problem with the thermocouple. That is the small tube that the pilot flame touches. Be sure it is not bent, and being missed by the pilot flame. They do go bad, and require replacement.
Yes, you can burn apple wood in a fireplace. It generates very little smoke and hotter than normal firewood. It is a good heat output with a small visible flame and ideal for wood-fire. It is a safely and efficiently burned in fireplace.
YES, you could use those little tanks for a fireplace (providing you have the proper adapter and gas regulator. BUT it won't work for more than a couple hours. The BTU output is to great for such a small canister and the pressure drop causing carbon monoxide (from the fireplace).
No, it will cause the wood to expand and eventually crack into a million small, tiny peices No, it will cause the wood to expand and eventually crack into a million small, tiny peices No, it will cause the wood to expand and eventually crack into a million small, tiny peices No, it will cause the wood to expand and eventually crack into a million small, tiny peices
Just a guess- but most have a sensor known as a thermocouple. This detects the heat of the flame of the pilot light, and keeps gas from flowing if the pilot light is not lit. check that your pilot light (a very small flame) is burning, and that the flame heats a small metal tube- about as big as a wooden match. If pilot is out, get it lit, and let burn for 5 minutes, and try lighting fireplace. If it still will not stay lit, the thermocouple may need replacement- they DO wear out. Check with your local gas appliance repair service. While they are fixing it, have them show you correct lighting process.
when the flame comes big the color of the flame is orange but, when the flame comes small the color of the flame is blue
small flame ,or big flame
The sodium is alkali metal it cannot be easily burn in a small flame
Yes, It is Gaelic for 'small flame' or 'little ball of flame.'
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This all depends on the brand and what type of insert you want. If you have a small fireplace with a simple insert, its not difficult. But if you have big fireplace with a heavy insert, you should let an expert install it.
Typically not, a vent free should not be installed in an enclosed area, ie. bedroom, bathroom. They do make "bedroom" sets that are a very low BTU. The flame is very small leading most to chose another option.