there is no stove invented that can handle liquid hydrocarbons.
Petrol is highly flammable and volatile, making it dangerous to use as a fuel in stoves. Its combustion can produce harmful fumes and emissions, posing health risks. Additionally, petrol burns at a higher temperature than is typically needed for cooking, which can lead to food burning or the stove malfunctioning.
Industrial stoves are sold at most home improvement retailers such as Home Depot and Lowes, but also restaurant liquidators that are selling used products from out of business restaurants.
Diesel has highest ignition temperature.. So only diesel cant be used in petrol engine
Not exactly, propane {LPG} uses an open flame for cooking, same as Natural Gas or wood fires or butane stoves. To use petrol, {oil, or natural gasoline, or even bitumen tar} special stoves are used that do not expose the food to the fumes from the flame. Much like a wood stove, coal stove or pellet stove, these stoves are sealed and you cook atop a cast iron or soapstone stovetop much like you would an electric stove. ** natural gasoline a.k.a. white gas or Coleman stove fuel, is highly volatile and not recommended for indoor use. "Coleman" stoves using white gas, are specifically designed for the use of a pot which separates the fumes from the food. These stoves are expressly designed for camping and have been generally replaced with propane stoves. ***Sterno fuel is jellied "natural gas" or more correctly methyl alcohol (poisonous), some similar fuels use ethanol as well. It is not petrol.
LPG is abutane gas which can be easily liquefied and stored in cylinders. It have less carbon scale.But petrol and diesel have high carbon scale .to use it special stoves are used that do not expose the food to the fumes from the flame.
Because one has a petrol engine and the other has a diesel engine. Petrol/gasoline does not ignite the same way as diesel. It also does not have the lubrication qualities that diesel has. Gas in a diesel engine will damage the fuel system if the diesel very quickly.
how is petrol used in our everday life
Using a naked flame in a petrol station is dangerous because petrol vapors are highly flammable. Even a small spark from a flame could ignite these vapors, leading to a fire or explosion. This is why it is important to follow safety guidelines and only use equipment that is intrinsically safe in petrol stations.
You need a special kind of stove that can handle liquid hydrocarbons.
Propane.
stoves or campfires
The most commonly used fuel for cooking stoves in 1900 was wood.