No it won.t harm the engine the octane won't as great
Yes, putting petrol/gasoline in a diesel engine and running it will cause severe damage to the engine.
Yes, petrol/gasoline will severely damage a diesel engine.
Yes, burning gasoline in an engine to power a car is a chemical change. The gasoline undergoes combustion, reacting with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide, water, and energy in the form of heat that powers the engine.
no it will blow upMy VersionLacquer thinner will damage: Fuel linesFuel PumpInjectorsAnd cause major damage to the inside of the engine
Gasoline in a Diesel vehicle will do some serious damage to the engine.
Gasoline is burned by a car engine.
It is a car powered by an internal combustion engine running on gasoline.
That's an engine that burns gasoline, to produce motion. Many car engines use gasoline as fuel.
Using the AC takes power from the engine and it does lower the mpg.
If you fill a gasoline engine with diesel, you will normally be able to start the car and drive a few miles, but after a short amount of time the car will die out. There will likely be no permanent damage to the car. If it was gasoline in a diesel motor, it would be much worse.
The purpose of a gasoline car engine is to convert gasoline into motion so that your car can move. Currently the easiest way to create motion from gasoline is to burn the gasoline inside an engine. Therefore, a car engine is an internal combustion engine -- combustion takes place internally. The engine turns the explosion that takes place into Horsepower & Torque. Torque gets the car moving and Horspower keeps it moving.
If it is a car which has an engine that runs on regular gasoline (gas or petrol), and as long as its engine doesn't need the "high octane" type of gasoline - such as certain sports cars - then it should run just fine!But if the car has a diesel engine, you risk causing a lot of damage if you put gasoline fuel into the tank instead of diesel fuel... If that is what you were asking about, please see the answers to the Related Questions shown below.