Inside the stove, the smoky exhaust passes through a coated honeycomb (the catalyst). The device is chemically coated with a metal that reacts with smoke and other combustion byproducts. These byproducts then generally burn at around 500 degrees, much lower than a non-catalytic stove, which needs a temperature of 1100 degrees. Doing house cleaning this weekend and need advice on minimizing all the 'dust' in the house. Even the closets and desk drawers have a fine mist of white dust. We do open the windows for 'fresh air' so I imagine that is causing the dust problem This is a very windy city and I guess all the desert dust and construction dust ( I'm in Summerlin ).
Posted by4 years ago
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Hello! Hoping you won't find this question too stupid, I'm trying to figure out how to store my propane tank for the winter. I live in an apartment building so the choices are either outside (on the balcony) or inside. I'm not crazy about keeping it inside and I've seen other people leave them outside all year.
I live in Montreal, Canada. Average winter temp is probably -10 Celsius (14 Fahrenheit). It can go to -25 Celsius (-13F) with heavy snowfall.
Is it dangerous to leave it out?
Is there any temperature at which it should not be outside?