yes gasoline is flammable. thats why if you have a car accident and you are still in the car and it chucks into the pumps then your car will ghet on fire.
hope this helps
i like squishy noses
Yes, hydrogen is more flammable than gasoline.
Gasoline is very flammable.
Diesel fuel itself will burn but you really can't call it flammable. When you add gasoline to it, the flammability greatly increases with the amount of gasoline you add.
Not all liquids are flammable. Some liquids that are flammable are gasoline, alcohol, oil. Liquids like water are not flammable.
Because water is not a flammable substance and gasoline is.
It's flammable.
Petrol
Gasoline is the most flammable between gas and diesel due to its lower flash point and vaporization rate. Diesel is less flammable because it requires higher temperatures to ignite compared to gasoline.
Gasoline ignites because gasoline is flammable. (simple answer) A more detailed answer would be. Gasoline produces flammable vapors at a much lower temperature than almost any other 'common' chemical. It is the vapors that ignite rather than the chemical itself. Also Gasoline vapors are heavier than air. Any 'Flammable' chemical will ignite in the presence of an open flame or spark if there are sufficient fumes.
Gasoline is indeed flammable. It is a volatile liquid that easily ignites and burns when exposed to a spark, flame, or heat source. This is why it is a common fuel for vehicles and other machinery that rely on internal combustion engines.
Gasoline is flammable, not explosive. It can ignite and burn rapidly when exposed to a spark or flame, but it does not explode on its own.
The FR (flammable range) of gasoline is 1.4% LEL (lower exposive limit) to 7.6 UEL (upper exposive limit). Below 1.4% the gasoline vapor is said to be too lean and above 7.6% and the vapor is too rich. In either case gasoline will not burn if it is not in the FR.