How to Adjust Propane Flames

How to Adjust Propane Flames

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Propane gas is a cheap, clean and efficient cooking and heating fuel. Used for everything from lighting an outdoor campsite to heating homes and industries, propane is a fuel that is also very safe when handled correctly. Proper operation of a propane stove, heater, lantern or other device includes regulation of the flame height and color to ensure nearly complete combustion.

Items you will need

  • Propane lantern or appliance with adjustment knob

  • Match or spark ignitor

Common Steps

Turn on the propane stove, grill, furnace, heater or lantern using the appliance's fuel knob or flame adjuster control. The precise location of this control varies by manufacturer. They are usually found on the front of kitchen and camping stoves, on the top of propane heaters, and just below the glass mantles of propane lanterns. More complex appliances, such as propane kitchen stoves and furnaces, have electronic ignition devices requiring no input from a user.

Light a wooden kitchen match or a spark ignitor. Apply the match's flame to the fuel outlet. If using a built-in spark ignitor incorporated into a kitchen stove, a house furnace, certain outdoor cooking grills, or a portable heater, the propane should ignite automatically.

Note the color and shape of the propane's flame. The major portion of the flame should be an electric blue color with only a hint of yellow or orange at its tip. Use the fuel control knob to either raise or lower the height of the flame and to ensure it remains the correct color. A flame containing too much yellow indicates incomplete combustion that wastes fuel and presents a carbon monoxide hazard.

In the case of propane kitchen ranges and house furnaces, adjustment of the flame should be performed by an appliance professional only.

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