A barrel of oil yields these refined products (percent of barrel): 47% gasoline for use in automobiles 23% heating oil and diesel fuel 18% other products, which includes petrochemical feedstock-products derived from petroleum principally for the manufacturing of chemicals, synthetic rubber and plastics 10% jet fuel 4% propane 3% asphalt (Percentages equal more than 100 because of an approximately 5% processing gain from refining.)
Control of the ratio gas fuel/air in the burner.
That depends on what is burning. If it's something normal like wood, the coloration is attributable to the changes in temperature as the flame moves away from the fuel. In other cases, such as a hazardous material, the color can be orange, green, blue, purple depending on the fuel...One things sure though! You don't want to be ANYWHERE near a flame that's any color other than orange!
Nuclear fuel does eventually run out of energy, yes.
I assumed this question is on symbol interpretation. There are symbol on energy, for instance atom is for nuclear energy, lightning is for electricity, fire is for thermal energy, wood/plant is fuel derived from wood/plant, oil barrel for oil. From above example, wood/plant fuel is chemical potential and nuclear fuel is nuclear potential energy.
There are 42 gallons (1 U.S. gallon = 3.78 liters) in a barrel (i.e., 1 barrel of oil = 159 liters). When converting to oil to Metric Tonnes (MT), there is around 7.3 BBL per MT, and 304 Gallons per MT. Originally there were 40 gallons to a barrel. However, that was changed in the mid-19th century to give a little extra so consumers wouldn't feel "cheated." According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, 1 "BBL" of crude oil makes about 17 gallons of gasoline, 12 gallons of gasoil, 7 gallons of jet fuel or kerosene, while lubricants, light naphtha and asphalt makes up the rest. This ratio depends on the crude type and varies a lot. The easy way to remember the number of gallons in a barrel of oil: There are 7 letters in gallons and 6 letters in barrel. 7X6=42 gallons. 42 US gallons. ALL OIL PRODUCTS ARE +/- 5 PERCENT, ALSO THE BARREL!!
normally a barrel of something is 40 gallons, that is the standard for oil, however, 55 gallon and other size barrels exist as well.
One barrel of Singapore Jet Fuel cost US$170.48 on 10th July 2008
A barrel usually contains up to 42 gallons of jet fuel. The barrels are priced per barrel or per gallon.
No
Go to the basement, under the stairs there is a barrel of fuel. Click on it.
65gals
Yes, at wide open throttle only. However, the extra unburned fuel is abrasive to the cylinder walls and will where out the engine alot sooner...not to mention the cost of fuel. Horse power produced is limited by the amount of fuel mixture through the heads among other things.
410 lbs
On average, about 50% of a barrel of oil is refined into gasoline, while 20% is refined into heating fuel or diesel. Other products like jet fuel, asphalt, and lubricants make up the remainder.
It is located inside the fitting between the fuel line and the carburetor.
Control of the ratio gas fuel/air in the burner.
Incomplete question, move what distance, what load, what size engine, how fast, what gear is the truck in and last of all, is this a trick question, because it relevance Percentage needs to be compared to something eg: percentage of air to fuel ratio for ideal mixture? Answer 14.7 to 1. Please make sense with your question