there is no difference.
I've got a kenmore 4 burner with a rotisserie and a searing burner, but no smoker. I'm looking for simple.
You get everything with this grill except the rod for your rotisserie, a cover and a propane tank. Other than that you get an infrared side burner (better for searing steaks than heating pots), lots of cooking space and internal grill lights.
A sear burner is designed to sear meats to provide that "Pittsburg" or "Char" crunch. These are "underfired" (they heat from below) as opposed to a salamander which is overfired. The infrared means that the searing is provided by a radiant heat source, a hot ceramic plate for example, rather than a flame. Whenever a hydrocarbon-base fuel (natural gas, propane, briquets or charcoal) is burned it releases CO2 and water vapor. An infrared heat source does not. Some consider the dry heat of an infrared source superior. An infrared heat source may be heated by a hydrocarbon source (i.e. natural gas or propane), however the flue gases are vented away from the meat so that only the dry heat is used.
The energy you feel as heat from an electric burner is infrared radiation, which is a form of electromagnetic waves. When the burner heats up, it emits infrared radiation that is absorbed by nearby objects, including your skin, causing them to warm up.
one side shoots out flames
infrared radiation
The dual layer burner supports DVD-DL discs, dual layer DVDs with just under 9GB of storage space.
Examples: Bunsen burner, alcohol burner, electrically heated plate, infrared lamp.Attention: heating of organic solvents may be the cause of fires and explosions !
Yes. There is no difference that I know of between a DVD burned on a computer DVD burner and a DVD burned on a "tv" DVD burner.
The advantages of using a jet-powered infrared gas-range burner in cooking appliances include faster cooking times, more even heat distribution, precise temperature control, and energy efficiency.
Oh, dude, you're really getting into the nitty-gritty of lab equipment, huh? So, like, a Fisher burner is just a fancy term for a Bunsen burner with a built-in gas regulator. It's like saying, "I have a smartphone" instead of just saying, "I have a phone." They both spit out flames, just one comes with a little extra feature.