A small incandescent telltale lamp on a dynamo or battery circuit to show approximately by its brightness the voltage of the current.
a small light on an electrical device to indicate whether the device is in operation or that the power is on.
a small gas flame kept burning continuously on a stove, water heater, or other gas-burning device, so as to allow immediate ignition of the main flame when the gas flow is turned on.
a small gas flame that ignites the main burner to produce fire in the gas fireplace.
A small flame in gas units that burns constantly and is used to automatically light the burners and oven. Most cooking appliances today feature pilotless ignition systems.
Continuously burning source of ignition found in heater-rated gas appliances.
The flame that ignites the main burner on a gas furnace.
small auxiliary gas burner that provides a flame to ignite a larger gas burner
a small flame that ignites the gas from the stove burners
a small flame that stays on all the time to ignite the oven when you turn it on
A small flame or spark used to ignite gas at a burner. Most newer appliances have electric pilots; older appliances have a small permanent flame.
A small, continually burning gas flame inside a gas-fired water heater, dryer, range, or similar appliance. This flame ignites the appliance's gas burner.
A small flame in gas units that burns constantly and is used to automatically light the burners and oven. Pilot lights are rarely found in today's cooking appliances.
A small, continuous flame (in a hot water heater, boiler, or furnace) that ignites gas or oil burners when needed.
A small flame that stays lit all the time and ignites the burner flame.
A pilot light is a small gas flame, usually natural gas or liquefied petroleum gas, which is kept alight in order to provide an ignition source for a more powerful gas burner.