When we ignite the jet fuel,the temperature can go as high as 800 Oc and may come down to approx 600 Oc
Jet fuel is high grade diesel so a jet fuel car would use high grade diesel fuel.
the hot sauce in the pizza place the hot chocolate you have to get the chocolate in the pizza place and go to the coffee shop and fix the coffee machine and make the hot chocolate the jet pack fuel you have to go to the lighthouse and get the cream barrel and bring it to jet pack guy to make it jet pack fuel
you don't pour the hot sauce and the hot chocolate and the jet pack fuel into the furensic analyser. you pour it into the glasses machine!
Of course. Standard piston engines are fueled with a good quality gasoline, and the jet turbines run on jet fuel, which is most likely a kerosene-based product.
So that if a fire occurs in the engine, the fuel will not keep feeding the fire and eventually let the fire die out.
You get jet pack fuel and hot chocolate.
fuel + spark = fire = heat, no water = overheat
Construction grade steel burns at 2795 degrees Fahrenheit. Jet fuel does not burn this hot. Its maximum temperature is 1472 degrees Fahrenheit.
Above 410 degrees F jet fuel will autoignite. It has to get up to 140 degrees F before it will produce vapors which could burn if an ignition source was present.
You ground the aircraft because helicopters build up static electricity in flight. You then connect a hose to the filler neck and pump in the fuel the helicopter uses - either jet fuel or gasoline.
No, "jet fuel" refers to a set of fuels used in gas turbine engines (GTE). Gasoline would burn far too hot in a GTE, eventually damaging the engine. Jet fuel is a lot closer in nature to Diesel, Parafin or Kerosene
Depends on what engine your talking about, kerosene fuel can burn in a jet engine at around 2000 degrees Fahrenheit