in the winter condensation occurs in fuel tanks and in sufficient quantity it will freze and block the lines add a little methyl hydrate or alcohol to get rid of it
Air is made up of a number of different compounds and elements that all freeze at different temperatures. Some of them never freeze. eg. nitrogen. Others like carbon dioxide will freeze at -78.5 degrees centergrade
Plain water because the salt in the other water lowers the freezing point. All molecules must line up in order to freeze, therefore if adding salt, the Na and CL must line up with the water molecules in order to freeze. With plain water, the molecules line up faster and thus freeze faster.
Water will freeze faster than 7-up. This is due to the extra stuff in 7-up that isn't in water, such as sugars, syrups and caffeine.
The space that a gas takes up is called its volume.
If food in your fridge ends up frozen, you have the temperature set too cold.
No!!!! Regular Anti-Freeze is not a combustible liquid! Gasoline already has a "gas line anti-freeze" added to it in cold climates. In extremely cold areas, one small bottle of "gas line Anti-freeze" purchased at an Auto Parts store will help.
The gasoline doesn't freeze, it is the water/moisture in the tank and lines that freezes up. Regular use of a good fuel line antifreeze should help keep it under control.
Absolutely yes. It would run for a couple of seconds and quit. If there is any water in the fuel it will freeze. Once weather warms and car runs, put a put a good quality DRY GAS in the gas tank, and fill it up. The dry gas will allow the water to eventually burn off.
You go up down up up down
Air is made up of a number of different compounds and elements that all freeze at different temperatures. Some of them never freeze. eg. nitrogen. Others like carbon dioxide will freeze at -78.5 degrees centergrade
the chemicals in the batter freeze up and aren't able to effectively transfer electrons, or if its a diesel the fuel can freeze(lower freeze temp than gas)
The best thing do with that is not to do it yourself. Call the gas company and they will come out and hook up the gas line for you for no charge.
No, its made of gas, if you tried to go in it you would burn up, or freeze to death.
The natural gas pipelines run under the house. you can run it from the middle of the house or where the hook up is to the garage for best gas usage.But the line should be outside as much as possible.
The simple answer is yes Gasoline is not a good enough lubricant in an engine
Plain water because the salt in the other water lowers the freezing point. All molecules must line up in order to freeze, therefore if adding salt, the Na and CL must line up with the water molecules in order to freeze. With plain water, the molecules line up faster and thus freeze faster.
temp less than 34 deg