wow your dad is a truly amazing pilot if he can use diesel...most jet's and planes use kerosine as a fuel, at least im sure it's kerosine :)
Jet fuel, literally <><><> Depends on the plane. Jet aircraft DO use jet fuel, which is mainly very pure kerosene. Piston engined aircraft use AVGAS- or Aviation gasoline- a high octane form of gasoline.
Avgas, or if it has a jet engine, it would use either Jet-A1 or Jet-B fuel.
Jet fuel, literally <><><> Depends on the plane. Jet aircraft DO use jet fuel, which is mainly very pure kerosene. Piston engined aircraft use AVGAS- or Aviation gasoline- a high octane form of gasoline.
Depending on what kind of plane it is, AV Gas or Jet Fuel
Jet fuel is injected into high pressure air in jet engines.
The primary types of jet fuel is Jet Fuel A, and Jet fuel A-1, the difference between the two is their freezing point (−40 °C vs −47 °C for Jet A-1). In almost all other regards (such as autoignition temperature, density, and open air buring temperatures) the two fuels are nearly identical.
The Jet-stream certainly does. Planes can use the jet-stream to reduce the amount of fuel it takes to travel from one side of the planet to the other. This is because - so long as the jet-stream is flowing in the same direction the plane wants to travel - it can 'push' the plane forward, which uses less fuel.
Turbine engines are most commonly found in airplanes. They use gas for fuel. They are also known as "jet" engines, hence the term for the plane.
Most people use nitrogen to inflate jet plane tires.
Sym Jet Euro 101cc Fuel
Jet A fuel is roughly at 7.99 a gallon so your looking at about $457,707.15. That's to fuel up a 747 by the way. It depends on the plane
Jet fuel is high grade diesel so a jet fuel car would use high grade diesel fuel.