Actually, Diesel is not flammable, it is combustible. The difference is the flash point. Diesel does not flash until 143 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything between 100 and 200 is combustible; less than 100 is flammable. Compare it to "gasoline" which has a flash point of -42 F (I think).
#2 Diesel is classed as a combustible material, not a flammable. The difference is the temperature where the material gives off a vapor that can be ignited. Below 100 degrees F, flammable. Above 100 degrees, combustible. Both will burn.
diesel fuel is classed as combustible due to the flashpoint being 61.5* Celsius, if you heat diesel fuel to above this temp that is when it become flammable
Nope,
Every diesel is only flameable in a fine sprayed mist
they are about the same
0.2 - 7%
a
Class B
class B
a
gasolinekerosinefuel oilbunker fuel oildiesel oilcetanehexaneheptaneoctanenonanemolten asphaltetc.Technically, anything with a closed-cup flash point at or above 100 degrees F would be classified as a "combustible liquid" not "flammable liquid". This would include diesel and fuel oil. NFPA 30.
gas
Diesel fuel itself will burn but you really can't call it flammable. When you add gasoline to it, the flammability greatly increases with the amount of gasoline you add.
kerosine
Petrol will catch fire first, petrol is highly flammable, diesel is not.
Class "B"
a
No, It's too flammable. There should be a compression compartment.
B
Petrol, it has a lower flash point and is more flammable than diesel
Class B
class B
a