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It gets its lubrication from the oil mixed with the gasoline.
No, engine oil is denser than gasoline and will sink to the bottom if they are mixed together. Oil is typically less buoyant compared to gasoline.
Only one reason. Gasoline is mixed with the oil.
2 cycle
The cost of gasoline made their summer plans too expensive. The small engine ran on gasoline mixed with oil.
In 99 out of 100 cases, a two-stroke engine seizes because there was no oil or not enough oil, or (remotely) the wrong kind of oil mixed with the gasoline. Two stroke engines must have the oil mixed with the gasoline in the correct proportion to operate.
No, it become unusable at that point. Gasoline has a considerably lower flash point than hydraulic oil, and hydraulic oil gets heated when it is in use.
If it is a 4 cycle engine, yes, it does need oil. If it is a 2 cycle the oil is mixed with the gasoline.
Mixed gasoline typically refers to a fuel mixture that contains gasoline as well as additives or other types of fuel, while regular gasoline is a standard fuel used in most vehicles. Mixed gasoline may have a higher octane rating or contain ethanol, which can impact engine performance. It is important to use the appropriate type of gasoline recommended for your vehicle to ensure proper functioning.
In a gasoline fueled engine, blue smoke is a sign of oil being burned with the gasoline. This could be from rings allowing too much oil by the piston, a leaking valve guide or even oil being mixed into the gasoline. Two cycle engines, which have oil mixed in with the fuel on purpose, will often produce this light blue smoke at the exhaust. This would be a natural condition.
You my have coolant or gasoline mixed with the oil. You would still have oil pressure but poor lubrication.
It would depend on the year and make vehicle and how much oil mixed into how much gasoline.