The temperature of a propane flame is theoretically about 2,000 °C (3,600 °F) but may be lower in practice, due to various factors (fuel/air mixture, flow rate, humidity, etc.).
553 degres
Propane has not a color.
My teacher taught me it was the hottest at the end of the blue part of the flame.
blue
my propane smoker grill is turning my food black the flame is yellow, should it be blue
70 degrees and the roaring flame is 100 degrees so yeah hot hot dont touch
Propane. This is what makes the flame that heats the air in the balloon.
No. Candles are not hot enough to melt a quarter. Some friends and i tried with a propane flame and were unsuccessful. It turned red hot but there was no melting.
Propane has not a color.
You light a flame at the holes in the bottom of the glass part with the propane on, the glass will fill with propane and catch fire.
its a pilot light, it burns the propane slowly so the propane doesnt just fill your house so that when you DO light it, it doesnt all explode. The small flame is the 'pilot light,' and it is there as a source of ignition for the propane gas entering the heater.
With the correct mixture of Acetylene and Oxygen the flame can reach 5,000F or more. Other fuels (Propane etc.) do not create temperatures this high.
65% propane and 35% butane
Because it contains propane and butane which produce blue flame on combustion
My teacher taught me it was the hottest at the end of the blue part of the flame.
A mixture of fuel (propane/oil) and heat. They can have a miniature lighter at the nozzle too
Methane, butane, propane, etc. are flammable.
blue