None, OIL is INsoluble in water
DEPENDS ON HOW MUCH OIL YOUR ARE USING
I'm sorry, but you can't substitute oil and water for eggs.
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Oil is slightly less dense than water and a litre of water weighs a kilogram. It would be less than a kilogram, but by how much depends on the type of oil.
Oil petty much soaks up oil the best
because the water is much cheaper than the oil to produce and tuna in water is way more common so there is a higher demand which lowers prices unlike tuna in oil ( I prefer tuna in oil)
You have either put too much oil into the engine or you may have a leak in your cylinder head gasket which is allowing coolant water into the oil - (if this is happening then you will see the water levels going down and perhaps a salad cream colored deposit collecting where you fill the engine with oil. Three conditions why the oil stick would read too full: (1) too much oil was added; (2) gasoline is getting into the oil; (3) water is getting into the oil. When you check the oil level, smell the oil for a gasoline smell or look for water beads on the dipstick and check the color of the oil. If it is chocolate-colored, there is water in the oil. In either case of gasoline or water in the oil, some repairs will have to be made. If it is just a case of too much oil, you need to drain some out.
The oil is much thicker and stickier
Juice is much denser than oil. Juice will sink and some what combine with water while oil floats on top of water.
Probably the amount that is spilled into the water....just guessing though.
Water can cause steel components to rust. Oil is much less corrosive.
Water is generally considered polluted by oil once the oil concentration exceeds 10mg/L. All considerations of oil density minimized, this is about 1 quart per 25,000 gallons of water