Synthetic can be mixed with regular oil without issue. It will not turn it muddy. Muddy oil is normally caused be very old oil, sludge or water in the oil. Your oil needs to be changed every 25 hrs of runtime or each season, whichever comes first.
I have seen it turn milky when a head gasket has deteriorated allowing coolant into the oil or visa versa. It can also be caused from overheating resulting in what we call warped head wich will act the same way as far as a synthetic break down of viscosity I'm not sure.
In an emergency, yes. The correct type is preferred. Mixing types can causes the coolant to turn into a thick slime.In an emergency, yes. The correct type is preferred. Mixing types can causes the coolant to turn into a thick slime.
Generally it is caused by mixing two incompatible types of antifreeze. Such as regular green propylene glycol with Dex-Cool. They are supposed to be mixable, but they turn into an orange-green mud in the cooling system.
If it's a hand mixer - insert the mixing arms, hold it in the bowl of whatever you are mixing and turn it on... keep it in the bowl or else food will fly all over the place. If it's a standing mixer - just turn it on and it does the rest for you. Happy Mixing!
It is primarily bcause runoff from the rain washes sediment into the river.
Go to the northeast of Oreburgh city. Take the path north, and you will find a sign, then tall grass turn left before the tall grass and there will be a boy there. That's where the muddy slope is.
when you form a solution by mixing everything evenly, the solute will what into the solvent
because sugar is the main thing that keeps a flower alive
It turns that colour because it contains a small amount of starch.
The answer depends on what you consider to be a "regular" number.
No
Well modulation is just simply moduling something into shape but mixing is just turn the mixture round and round till it is all squashed together.