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This entirely depends on the stove. Consumer-lever stoves? Sure, definitely. Commercial stoves? Probably not. Commercial stoves put out 3-4x the BTUs of a high-end consumer stove, and usually can't be installed in a home because they require significant shielding around them (so you don't burn a building down) and a very high flow hood. The highest-end Wolf range has a single burner that has a maximum output of 10,000BTU, and costs a whopping $17,000; a fairly basic range top for a commercial kitchen has six burners that can all output 32,000BTU, and costs about $3700. For stir-frying specifically, you can get a single ring wok burners outputting 92,000-125,000BTU starting at about $700 for natural gas (and a helluva lot more if you use LP).
Unfortunately, I can't find a solid conversion between gas and induction stove capabilities.
Oh, and FWIW - if you live somewhere with an unstable power grid, a natural gas or LP stove will continue to function when the power is out, albeit you'll need to light it manually. We lose power fairly regularly due to storms--usually only a day at a time, but sometimes as long as 3-4 days--and it would be a real hassle to have all electric appliances when there's no power.
This is only true on the simplest (or older) gas stoves. Most models these days have all sorts of electronics, including features to prevent gas leaks.
Mine works when the power is out. The only electrical part is the starter.
Also, I can heat my house (well, keep the temps above freezing) with my gas fireplace. I just have to manually click the pezioh electric starter.
OTOH, when the power is out, I can't run my stove vent hood, which vents outside and is why I don't worry much about "particulate matter." Never seen a non-externally-vented gas stove; I thought they were against code in the US, but whatever. The fireplace is entirely enclosed and sealed, and vented outside; heat circulation is via a fan that runs air around the heat box - which also doesn't run with power out, making it less efficient. But it still beats having the pipes freeze.
Yes, they exist, as I acknowledged. How old is it? Is it representative of what you'd find at a standard big box retailer?
For it to work, it means the controls must all be manual and mechanical. This is in contrast to the "smart" features that are very common.
Oh, 25 years old, or something? I've looked at replacing it with something newer and easier to clean, with electric controls instead of dials, but they're enormously more expensive and the basic manual dial versions are still available, and cheaper.
I mean, there's not much to a gas stove. I've taken mine completely apart because the peizo starter fried itself. You don't need more than physical dials to control gas flow, like a water faucet, and a peizo starter. Making them more complex is really silly. Even my in-laws stupid giant, expensive Viking has manual dials and peizo starters, although they only have to turn the dials on and the starters go automatically until they detect that the gas is burning. I have to press my dials to trigger the starter. Even in the Viking, the gas control is still just a valve; as long as there's gas pressure in the lines, you can manually start it with a match with no electricity. Their's is about 10 years old.
Funny, though: our fireplaces are reversed. Our gas fireplace is peizo started; their's you have to manually light with a lighter.