If we dissolve kerosene in petrol running vehicle the petrol filtrer in the car will be damaged and also the pump.
Type your answer here... the petrol kerosene diesel get sepreted due to fractional distillation .
Bitumen is the most viscous among petrol, diesel, gas, and kerosene. Viscosity refers to a fluid's resistance to flow, and bitumen is a heavy, tar-like substance with a high viscosity. In contrast, petrol and gas are lighter and flow more easily, while diesel has a moderate viscosity, higher than petrol but lower than bitumen. Kerosene sits between petrol and diesel in terms of viscosity.
No way ! Do not mix petrol with diesel it will ruin your diesel engine and be a very costly repair job.
Yes you can mix everything but don't put it in your engine because it will destroy it.
We do it in the winter. It may be illegal as you do not pay road tax on kerosene.
From my experience they do seperate. Gas (petrol) to the bottm and diesel to the top.
They all come from crude oil/ fossil fuels
You'll ruin the engine.
"Petrol" is what the British (and Australians, Irish and New Zealanders) call gasoline. Petrol is actually a contraction of the word petroleum which is the feedstock. So there's no difference between petrol and gasoline. Gasoline, kerosene, and diesel fuel are different "fractions" of petroleum distillate. Gasoline is the lowest-boiling/most volatile of the three, kerosene is intermediate, and diesel is the highest-boiling/least volatile. Jet fuel is actually Jet Kerosene. The Britsih usually call kerosene "paraffin". In the US, paraffin is an even higher fraction of petroleum distillate that is solid at room temperature and is generally referred to as "wax".
No, diesel does not mix with petrol. Diesel is a heavier fuel with a different chemical composition than petrol (gasoline), which can lead to engine damage if mixed. Using diesel in a petrol engine can cause serious performance issues and potential engine failure. It's important to use the correct fuel type for your vehicle.
No, the petrol has a higher ignition flash point than that of kerosene. It would be like using petrol in a diesel engine. The engine would run extremely hot and the engine could be destroyed. As diesel uses compression to burn the fuel petrol needs a spark. The petrol under higher compression will pre ignite and cause detonation in the piston cylinders. This could destroy the pistons, cylinder walls or the cylinder head of the engine.
salt and fossil fuels like: petrol, kerosene, diesel etc