'Bunker fuel C' is approximately 8.3 pounds per US gallon.
He/ she is a person who trades bunker oil, which is fuel for ship
Bunker oil is also called bunker fuel or bunker crude. It is any type of fuel used aboard a ship, but more commonly is No. 6 fuel oil.
what type of "HEATING OIL" #2 #4 #6 (Bunker C )
As fuel oil in the boilers of steam-turbine powered ships, perhaps.
Cruise ships run on diesel fuel to power generators while in port, and heavy fuel oil while sailing.
density of Fuel Oil at 15 degree celcius
The oil cargo goes into cargo tanks, the fuel oil or bunker goes into the bunker tanks. The lubrication oil (lube oil) goes into the lube oil tanks.
Black
According to Wikipedia online encyclopedia at http://en.wikipedai.org Bunker fuel is technically any type of fuel oil used aboard ships. It gets its name from the containers on ships and in ports that it is stored in; in the days of steam they were coal bunkers but now they are bunker-fuel tanks.
In a technical sense, any fuel used by ships is bunker fuel. As regards heavy fuel oil, it's either No. 5 or No. 6 fuel oil, and is most commonly No. 6 or "bunker fuel" or "navy special fuel oil" or something similar.No. 6 heavy fuel oil has a specific gravity of about 0.94 to 0.95 at room temperature (68 degrees F), and that translates to a weight density of about 59.3 to 59.9 pounds per cubic foot. Water weighs 62.44 pounds per cubic foot, by comparison at 68 degrees F.
fossils i think How about these examples: Coal, kerosene, whale oil, wood, propane, natural gas, butane, fuel oil, bunker C, gasoline, ethanol.......