Usually Ethanol or paraffin.
Check fuel and fire. Pull a plug and smell for raw fuel, and check the plug and see if there is fire to the plug. If I checked the plugs and it is not getting fire or fuel at all what could cause that problem.
Yes it does. If either fuel oxygen or heat were not sufficient or absent, fire would not be able to be sustained or ignited. :)
fuel injector
Most of the time water will extinguish a fire, but there are some situations where water can make a fire worse by spreading it, such as a grease fire on a stove, or a puddle of fuel burning. In those situations, a fire extinguisher should be used instead.
I use a fuel pressure gauge.
The Fire-Eaters has 224 pages.
The ISBN of The Fire-Eaters is 978-0340773826.
The Fire-Eaters was created on 2003-08-14.
we use a fire extinguisher ,fire blanket ,sand
fire eaters
You are in enough trouble as it is, so don't add fuel to the fire by saying that to her.
they were a sectionalists group that didn't like high tariffs and wanted to have south and north separate. the fire eaters hated to compromise of 1850
Fire-eaters
nope
Use extinguishers with a class B rating. They are intended for use on burning liquids.
To stoke a fire is to put fuel on the fire.
Cro-Magnon likely used a variety of materials as fuel for their fires, including wood, bone, and possibly dried dung. They would have used whatever was readily available in their environment to keep their fires burning for warmth, cooking, and other purposes.