One option is to simply include LaTeX code in your post and then tell readers that the equations can be viewed via a userscript or bookmarklet.
As mentioned on meta.SE, there are currently 42 sites on the network which support the MathJax variety of LaTeX. However, the chatrooms associated with those sites do not support MathJax. In those chatrooms it's common to use the JavaScript bookmarklets created by math.SE mod robjohn to render MathJax. You can read about the bookmarks on math.meta.SE, or just go straight to the installation page.
These bookmarklets can render MathJax on any Web page, although the output might not be perfect on some pages. I just did a brief test here using a short \begin{align}...\end{align}
sequence that spans several lines, but unfortunately everything got rendered onto a single line.
Another option is CodeCogs. For simple equations, you don't have to use their equation editor, you can simply construct a URL by hand by appending the LaTeX code to the CodeCogs prefix. (Of course, the resulting string needs to be a legal URL). You could specify GIF or PNG for the image format, but Stack Exchange sites can support SVG, which gives a superior result.
Eg, the URL https://latex.codecogs.com/svg.image?x=\frac{-b\pm\sqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a}
gives this result:
Here's the PNG version for comparison.
I suppose this is an ok option for single equations, but it's a bit tedious if you need multiple lines.