none I've been bit or stung by one actually.
Because it is a male carpenter bee and male carpenter bees can't sting.
sting
In theory, honey bees will sting anything that poses a threat to either a specific honey bee, or to the hive, including other insects, mammals, farm equipment, birds, clothing, etc. Stinging is their primary mode of defense. I have not heard of a specific case where a honey bee has stung a wood bee (or carpenter bee), but if a perceived threat from a carpenter bee was registered with one or more honey bees, or the hive, I have every reason to believe that honey bees would sting a carpenter bee. Incidentally, the opposite is also true, a carpenter bee could, in theory, sting a honey bee.
no sit down and relax
If they sting people many times it may hurt the people but after the bee stings many times then yes it dies.
Some people are allergic to bee stings and can die quickly from a single sting if not medically treated. Even if you are not allergic, you can also die from bee sting if you are stung many times.
Carbon Dioxide.
Carpenter bees do have venom. The only thing that distinguishes them from other bees is their habit of boring holes in wood to live.
If they were true honeybees, there were 4 bees. A bee dies after 1 sting.
A honey bee can only sting once before it dies.
Yes. The stinger of a honeybee has barbs on it which is left when the bee stings and tries to pull away. The barbs are connected to the bee's abdomen so once the bee stings and pulls away, the barb is pulled, which pulls the bee's abdomen out as well and then the bee soon dies.
A Bee sting contains a acid