It will not meet the specifications of a product to be sold.
Frankfurts are just larger hot-dogs, made from a variety of meat by-products, mostly from a mix of beef and pork. Some specialty frankfurters may have fish in them.
it it called pemmican
They made a language called Swahili. Its a mix of African language and Arabic
Fleas hosted by the black rats, made a bad mix. When the fleas killed the rat, they would look for a anther host. Humans made a good host in trasport ships.
no because then the mix wouldn't be viscus as much as what a conventional cake mix needs.
Yes! Diesel, kerosene and gasoline are really the same thing except that they have different octanes. Diesel is the lowest refined gas then kerosene then your different octanes of gas. So, to make the octane the same as kerosene you simply mix the right amount of gas with diesel and voila, you have kerosene. I think u can use a lower octane than kerosene but NEVER put anything of a higher octane than kerosene! Yes! Diesel, kerosene and gasoline are really the same thing except that they have different octanes. Diesel is the lowest refined gas then kerosene then your different octanes of gas. So, to make the octane the same as kerosene you simply mix the right amount of gas with diesel and voila, you have kerosene. I think u can use a lower octane than kerosene but NEVER put anything of a higher octane than kerosene!
No.
yes
No.
No, coconut oil do not dissolve in kerosene
We do it in the winter. It may be illegal as you do not pay road tax on kerosene.
all u need to do is add detergent and mix it
I suggest not.......
Yes they will. They are both petroleum products. My chainsaw has a 2 cycle engine, which burns a mixture of gasoline and oil, and they mix very well with each other.
Mix diesel in a gasoline engine and it will stall or run very poorly depending on how much you mixed in. Mix gasoline in a diesel engine and you will have engine damage.
Here's a hint: napalm is made in a similar fashion.
water will collect at the bottom, because of its higher density compared to kerosene