Divemaster920
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Go eat meat.........I don't understand how oil can break down over time. It's been sitting in the earth for millions of years, hasn't it?
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Go eat meat.........I don't understand how oil can break down over time. It's been sitting in the earth for millions of years, hasn't it?
While it was sitting in the earth, it wasn't doing anything. In your motor, its molecules are rolling between the bearing surfaces, which tends to break down the longer chain molecules into shorter chain molecules. Long chain molecules form the high viscosity component of the oil. Short chain molecules are the thin lower viscocity component. After extended use, the oil breaks down and lubricates less well.I don't understand how oil can break down over time. It's been sitting in the earth for millions of years, hasn't it?
It is not the Oil molecules that break down, it is the additives. Motor oil is made of several components. The first is base oil, which only comes from 2 sources. The others are additives that perform specific functions.I don't understand how oil can break down over time. It's been sitting in the earth for millions of years, hasn't it?
I have to agree with this. My experience is through the power industry, and we have big industrial centrifuges. My plant has 3 centrifuges that turn 15,000 rpm, and we send off oil samples to ensure that is within specs. I have no doubt that some of these homemade centrifuges will improve the oil, but unless it is sent to someone for analysis, there is no telling if it is clean enough to use as fuel or not.but if i were you i would find someone with said setup. And watch the process with your own eyes before you shell out the money for this.
I sprinkle it on my Frosted Flakes in the morningWhat do you do with the crud that's spun out of the waste oil?
What I would do depends on the quantity, and how much oil is in the crud. If it is semi-liquid, I would donate it to the waste oil bins at the local dump/transfer station. If it is crusty and tar like, I would just trash it. Out here, they burn everything in the incinerator anyway.What do you do with the crud that's spun out of the waste oil?
Radioactivity is not a molecule thing, it is a nucleus thing. There is nothing you can do with fire/heat/water that will have any effect on the nucleus whatsoever.Oil is the sacrificial component btween your rings and the engine block wall...and is subjected to severe stress due to heat, pressure and cleaving stress. This actually causes the oil to break down (some is slightly radioactive as the molecules get cleaved).
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