Yes. You can see through it. Sometimes it can temporarily cloud, but should still be pretty much translucent even then. If you can't see through it, discard, it's contaminated and will hurt your machinery.
Oil, Coal, and Petroleum
No. Depending on the purity, ethanol (the alcohol in booze) can float on kerosene, but only barely. For the most part, yes.
A kerosene heater has a wick made of fiberglass that is connected to a kerosene tank. When the wick is lit, the kerosene keeps the wick burning, and a convection unit in the heater uses the flame to heat the air. In some kerosene heaters, there is a fan to blow the heated air into the room to heat it faster.
100 gallons of kerosene weighs = 660 pounds
The weight of one gallon of kerosene is 6.82 pounds.Based on a cubic foot of kerosene is 51 pounds and 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot.
Kerosene does not have a lustre because it is a transparent, colorless liquid. Lustre is the way light interacts with a surface and reflects back, which does not occur with kerosene.
No, coconut oil do not dissolve in kerosene
Mustard oil and kerosene oil can be separated by distillation. Since they have different boiling points, heating the mixture will cause the kerosene oil to vaporize first, leaving the mustard oil behind. The vapors of kerosene oil can then be condensed back into a liquid form.
kerosene is a thin oil that was used in 1849 to light oil fuled lamps.
Kerosene and home heating oil can be mixed in a oil furnace. Kerosene is thinner than heating oil. Mixed together will make the furnace burn cleaner.
kerosene
No, kerosene oil does not dissolve in water because it is a nonpolar substance. Water is a polar solvent and cannot easily mix or dissolve nonpolar substances like kerosene oil.
no it is not transparent
What is the easiest method of removal of Aromatic compounds in Kerosene Oil?
Kerosene
Kerosene and heating oil are not the same. Make sure you use clear kerosene if you aren't venting out of a chimney - for example a space heater. Regular kerosene has a red dye that can be toxic
Heavy fuel oil is typically more viscous than kerosene. Heavy fuel oil is thicker and more dense, making it harder to flow compared to kerosene.