You get a blister, it depends how deep the burn is.
Yes, if it is burned.
The oil that is burned by furnaces is mostly #1 or #2 fuel oil
The carbon comes from the oil.
Dawn.
Carbon dioxide is added to the atmosphere;here when coal oil and natural gas are burned?
Continually needing to add oil is a sign of a mechanical problem. If there are no obvious signs of an external leak (like an oil stain under the car when you park it), most likely the problem is that the oil is getting into the combustion chamber and being burned. Either way, if you don't know how to fix it yourself (and if you need to ask the question, trust me, you don't know how to fix it yourself), you should take it to a mechanic and have it examined.
Carbon dioxide is the colorless reactive gas produced when fuels such as oil and coal are burned.
It is burned by the engine combustion process or it is leaking out of the engine.
Oil can either be burned, or it can leak
both can be burned as fuel.
When gas, oil, and coal are burned, they release carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and other pollutants into the atmosphere. These pollutants contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and climate change.
yes it is