No, kerosene is a liquid
Kerosene
The odor of kerosene is "aromatic".
You start it by igniting kerosene.
There is no true way to convert blue kerosene back into white kerosene. Blue kerosene has had dye added in order to make it that color.
Remove the oil pan from the engine and clean it with kerosene.
All I know is that Kerosene is from Petroleum. Therefore the source of Kerosene is Petroleum. Kerosene is poisonous and not clean while burning, so be careful if you're going to burn it. Hope this helps in some way :)
You should use drum polish to clean your drum set. Use a soft clean cloth to wipe the polish off the drums. Avoid using napkins and paper towels, they are too rough.
Not the ideal, but to some degree, yes.
Naphtha VM&P Grade, Kerosene and IPA can be used to clean it.
Diesel is a different grade of kerosene and will work. You may need to change the nozzle so it burns clean.
Varsol Clear kerosene works pretty good.
BOOMThe above answer is wrongWhat you get is a flammable liquid that can not be used in diesel engines or kerosene lamps or heaters. This is called contamination.I recommend you poor the concoction into a waste oil collection drum.
A little kerosene won't hurt anything, but there are much better fuel system cleaners available at your local auto parts store. Agreed, kerosene will do little to clean the system. Seafoam and Techron are both excellent fuel system cleaners.
Obviously, this depends on the size of the drum :-) You can get small drums for domestic use, say 2 or 4 litres. Then there's industrial sizes, which could range from 20, 25 litres upwards. But here's the answer I suspect you might be looking for: 205 litres is a common size for things like Diesel, Kerosene, etc. that's because it's equivalent to 44 gallons (as in "44 gallon drum").
Obviously, this depends on the size of the drum :-) You can get small drums for domestic use, say 2 or 4 litres. Then there's industrial sizes, which could range from 20, 25 litres upwards. But here's the answer I suspect you might be looking for: 205 litres is a common size for things like Diesel, Kerosene, etc. that's because it's equivalent to 44 gallons (as in "44 gallon drum").
kerosene soak for 12 hours