Want this question answered?
Diesel is a fuel that is used in cars and stored in tanks. Gasoline / Petrol is another fuel that is used in cars and stored in tanks.
A tank is used to contain something. It could be fuel, air, or even milk. Many products are stored in tanks.
The manure is harvested and left to settle in a structure similar to that of a Teepee. The methane gas is given off and collected, this is then Compressed and stored in tanks. The gas is used much in the same was as LPG in cars today. The vehicles have to be specially modified to run on this type of fuel.
It is stored in water filled tanks. This provides shielding as well as cooling. In some plants the water filled tanks have become filled up and shielded containers are having to be used.
Propane and LNG, liquid natural gas are two of the most common. Hydrogen and oxygen used by NASA is also stored as pressurized liquid.
Steel tanks are used for fuel containment in large amounts. Most liquids stored in steel tanks are hazardous, combustible and flammable liquids. Steel tanks are often used by chemical facilities, bulk petroleum plants, government agencies, and farming operations.
No. Both tanks flow to a crossover, which feeds into the fuel pump. Both tanks are used simultaneously.
During WWII, US tanks burned gasoline for fuel; during the Vietnam War US Patton and Sheridan tanks used diesel for fuel.
Four tanks stored 270 pounds (120 kg) of mono-methyl hydrazine fuel and nitrogen tetroxide oxidizer. They were pressurized by 1.1 pounds (0.50 kg) of helium stored at 4,150 pounds per square inch (28.6 MPa) in two tanks.
In the US they are stored in the complete spent fuel rods which are stored on power plant sites in water filled tanks. In some places dry storage has also had to be used, because the water tanks are full. In the UK and in France they are stored on site for a while and then taken to a central processing site (Sellafield in the UK)
A fuel that has been used cannot be stored because it has been used, thus it is no more.
Those are the vehicles fuel tanks