I’m assuming this means you’re getting an orange flame from your gas range instead of a blue one.
I think you need to get the burners and the gas lines cleaned.
I’m assuming this means you’re getting an orange flame from your gas range instead of a blue one.
I think you need to get the burners and the gas lines cleaned.
I dont know the question, but will guess the answer. The sodium line (589 nm) from spilt salt/salt solution (eg food).
Salt or water will do it.
Some orange is normal on high for LP gas, natural gas should be totally blue
Paraphrased OP: Natural gas stove, orange flickers at the edges of a normal-shaped blue flame. Three or four per second, each lasting less than half a second. Took off burner-grate-thingies, cleaned very well around where the gas comes out, turned it back on (w/o replacing burner grates) with same results. All four burners do it.
What should I do, where else can I clean? Is there a CO danger? Should I call a master plumber?
BTW, stove is 10 months old, installed by master plumber.
The stove may have a air intate ajustment you can make to change the air/gas ratio.
Ummmm.
Yeah. I wanna hear something, too, because every gas (propane) stove I’ve ever seen has orange flames if the dial is turned above medium. I don’t know why there would be a problem.
propane (aka LP gas) is suppose to have some orange. Natural gas should not.