bitumen, fuel oil, lubricating oil, diesel, kerosene, naphtha, petrol, refinery gas
Petrol and oil will mix, with the petrol acting as a solvent.
This situation presents an direct relationship between the oil viscosity and the work of the pump. The thicker the oil the more the pump most work to move it.
Calor gas, petrol, naptha, paraffin, diesel, fuel oil, lubricating oil and bitumen all come out of a fractionating column
They burn fuel so that they can make petrol.
petrol is made from the fossil fuel oil
Crude oil
oil is used to produce petrol.
yes, they are all fuel.
Petrol-which is oil-makes fuel along with wind.
Petrol, fuel oil , disel oil
oil and petrol
4 stroke fuel is straight petrol, it does not have oil in it! If you use it in a 2 stroke engine you will seize the motor. 2 stroke fuel has oil added to it.
by fractional distilation which is heating something up so it boils and evaporates then the petrol condences and runs down the tube for petrol it turns into petrol (from fuel oil) by catylistic cracking, this is when the hydrocarbon get chopped of into smaller pieces
yes it is thinner because diesel has more particles in it that petrol does which makes just that little bit thicker.:)
You need to clarify this a little bit. Hydraulic oil is used for hydraulic systems rather than unleaded gasoline (petrol) because hydraulic oil is designed for it, being much less flammable, having a thicker viscosity, and being less prone to leakage. It is not used as a fuel.
Petrol