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Duff[_2_] December 10th 08 05:16 AM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much.

It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.

Why?


Wayne Boatwright[_5_] December 10th 08 05:24 AM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
On Tue 09 Dec 2008 10:16:08p, Duff told us...

Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much.

It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.

Why?



Dunno, but that's why I bought an electric range.

--
Wayne Boatwright
(correct the spelling of "geemail" to reply)
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Date: Tuesday, 12(XII)/09(IX)/08(MMVIII)
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Countdown till Christmas Day
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Tom Kendrick December 10th 08 08:36 AM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
A gas cooktop (or the surface burners on a gas stove) does not add
much heat to the kitchen IF the pots/pans cover the burner well and
the flame is not too high for the pan size. I have a gas cooktop with
several 12,000 BTU burners and one 16,000 BTU burner. There is a vent
hood over it to carry out steam, smoke and the heat as well. The vent
hood CFM of exhaust must be matched to the cooktop to work properly.

Any oven generates quite a bit more heat than is actually required to
heat the food than would be required on a burner (electric or gas).
Since the gas oven must vent its combustion heat (whatever does not go
into the internal oven space), lack of sufficient venting will warm up
a kitchen in a hurry.
We have double electric ovens which don't heat the kitchen space as
quickly as gas would. However, on Thanksgiving Day when BOTH ovens are
running for several hours, the kitchen WILL warm up significantly,
just more slowly since the heat has to leave the oven, even with the
door closed. Just using one oven for a brief period is not as
noticeable. If you leave the kitchen within 20 minutes of food removal
(typical mealtime length), the oven will still be cooling off but you
will not be present to feel it.

On Tue, 09 Dec 2008 23:16:08 -0600, Duff wrote:

Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much.

It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.

Why?


[email protected] December 10th 08 12:30 PM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
On Wed, 10 Dec 2008 02:36:09 -0600, Tom Kendrick
wrote:

A gas cooktop (or the surface burners on a gas stove) does not add
much heat to the kitchen IF the pots/pans cover the burner well and
the flame is not too high for the pan size. ..



I agree. Also note that in most locations, per BTU gas is much
cheaper than electric. In the winter, it is a win win situation.

James Sweet[_2_] December 10th 08 05:47 PM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
wrote:
On Wed, 10 Dec 2008 02:36:09 -0600, Tom Kendrick
wrote:

A gas cooktop (or the surface burners on a gas stove) does not add
much heat to the kitchen IF the pots/pans cover the burner well and
the flame is not too high for the pan size. ..



I agree. Also note that in most locations, per BTU gas is much
cheaper than electric. In the winter, it is a win win situation.



It is still cheaper, however natural gas has increased dramatically in
cost over the last decade, it's only marginally cheaper than electric
these days, but then we have cheap hydro power.

gpsman December 10th 08 06:04 PM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
On Dec 10, 12:16 am, Duff wrote:
Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much.

It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.

Why?


Combustion requires "oxygen".
-----

- gpsman

James Sweet[_2_] December 10th 08 06:30 PM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
gpsman wrote:
On Dec 10, 12:16 am, Duff wrote:
Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much.

It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.

Why?


Combustion requires "oxygen".
-----

- gpsman



And more importantly, it gives off carbon dioxide and water vapor. This
has to go somewhere.

mike December 10th 08 06:59 PM

Gas Range heats up kitchen
 
On Dec 10, 10:30*am, James Sweet wrote:
gpsman wrote:
On Dec 10, 12:16 am, Duff wrote:
*Just installed a new range and it heats up the kitchen way too much..


*It says in the manual not to block the 'vent' so they designed it to
waste all that heat.


Why?


Combustion requires "oxygen".
*-----


- gpsman


And more importantly, it gives off carbon dioxide and water vapor. This
has to go somewhere.


Yup, and it gives off trace amounts of carbon monoxide.


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