Kerosene is lighter than diesel. Diesel has a higher density and is thus heavier than kerosene.
Yes, diesel vapor is heavier than air. It tends to sink and accumulate in low-lying areas. This property is important to consider when handling, storing, or working with diesel fuel to prevent potential health and safety hazards.
Yes, diesel fuel is heavier than water. Water has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter, while diesel fuel has a density of about 0.85-0.90 grams per cubic centimeter. This means that diesel fuel will sink in water.
No, diesel fuel is not a mixture of gasoline. Diesel fuel is a specific type of fuel that is heavier and less volatile than gasoline, and is used primarily in diesel engines. Gasoline, on the other hand, is a lighter and more volatile fuel that is used in spark-ignition engines.
Number 2 or red diesel weighs 8.33 pounds per gallon. It is slightly heavier than water which weighs 8.13 pounds per gallon.
Kerosine (sometimes spelt kerosene) is a mixture of hydrocarbons that is a fraction from the fractional distillation of petroleum extracted between 150 and 200 0C. See wikipedia -fractional distillation for a diagram of an industrial fractionating column
No, diesel is heavier.
bio kerosine is made from the catalytic cracking of bio diesel
bio kerosine is made from the catalytic cracking of bio diesel
Water is heavier than diesel fuel
Petrol and kerosene are more flammable than diesel, gas, and bitumen. Diesel and gas require higher temperatures to ignite, while bitumen is a thick, viscous substance with a higher flash point, making it less flammable than the other options.
wow your dad is a truly amazing pilot if he can use diesel...most jet's and planes use kerosine as a fuel, at least im sure it's kerosine :)
They are similar, kerosene is better in cold weather and is added to diesel to make the winter blends. Kerosene burns cleaner, but diesel has more btu per gallon.
Fuel or lubrication? Lubricant looks like petrol engine lubricant, fuel is like paraffin/kerosine.
Diesel and kerosene are quite close chemically. Kerosene has some heavier paraffins and would clog the injectors of a diesel engine.
Yes, diesel vapor is heavier than air. It tends to sink and accumulate in low-lying areas. This property is important to consider when handling, storing, or working with diesel fuel to prevent potential health and safety hazards.
Yes, diesel fuel is heavier than water. Water has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter, while diesel fuel has a density of about 0.85-0.90 grams per cubic centimeter. This means that diesel fuel will sink in water.
No, diesel engines cost more to build than petrol engines. They are built much heavier.