You cannot mix your own 2 cycle oil. You must purchase 2 cycle oil just like you purchase 4 cycle oil.
The engine will be ruined because a two stoke needs oil mixed in the gas for lubrication.
no
Four stroke engines use an oil sump, and do not need to have oil mixed into their fuel.
Oil is a lubricant. 2 stroke oil is designed to be mixed with gasoline and in that form it lubricates the engine. 4 stroke oil lubricates the engine but is not burned as 2 stroke oil is. This has nothing to do with speed. So, the answer to your question is neither is faster as they are just lubricants.
Mercury has made the 50 in both 2 cycle and 4 cycle. If it is oil injected and there is no oil that you change and no oil filter it is a 2 cycle engine where the oil is mixed with the gasoline.
Gas and oil are mixed on a two-stroke engine, but you don't always have to do it. Some two-stroke outboards have oil tanks and mixing systems that dispense the correct amount of oil for any operating condition; if you have this, you need to check the oil tank every time you add fuel.
Long as your only unsig it in your lawn mower then no problems. Just don't leave it sitting around for weeks as normal motor oil will separate from the fuel faster than 2 stroke oil.
There is no oil to change in a two stroke engine. The lubricant is the oil that is mixed with the gas.
if your scooter has a engine oil dip stick then it is a four stroke. if it has a oil tank that you have to put oil in then it is 2 stroke.
Yes, two stroke (or Two cycle) engines have oil that is mixed into the fuel to lubricate the motor's moving parts. Where as, in a 4 stroke engine the oil is separate from the fuel. When the fuel oil mix is burned in a two cycle engine more pollution is given off.
It gets its lubrication from the oil mixed with the gasoline.
In 99 out of 100 cases, a two-stroke engine seizes because there was no oil or not enough oil, or (remotely) the wrong kind of oil mixed with the gasoline. Two stroke engines must have the oil mixed with the gasoline in the correct proportion to operate.