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2007-02-22 08:39:31 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Environment

5 answers

haha i loved how the first two people thought you were talking about a gaseous substance :D lol they take words too literally ... unless you arent talking about gasoline ... haha anyway the freezing point of gasoline is like -103 F lol

2007-02-22 09:08:34 · answer #1 · answered by illchillkyle 1 · 0 0

Most gasses have a liquid phase before they ice over. But if the gas hits something cold enough it undergoes what is called "deposition". Sometime water vapour in the air will condense as ice if it touches something very cold.

Or when you say gas do you actually mean petroleum spirits as in gasoline. Gasoline is not a pure substance and different parts have different freezing points. But about -100C won't be too far out.

2007-02-22 16:44:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

YES. Ever hear of gas line freeze? You would have to put an additive, called HEET in the gas tank to get your car running. ANTIFREEZE is for your radiator, that holds water. ANTIFREEZE does not go in the gas tank.

2007-02-22 16:45:08 · answer #3 · answered by LINDA D. 5 · 0 0

gas is designed to withstand blistering cold temperatures... diesel is designed to go even colder...

it isnt the fuel you should worry about...

check your antifreeze levels maybe once a month... test it to see if it is at the right temperature levels...

that is all..

2007-02-22 16:44:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yeap.
Every liquid has a freezing point, but to stop this add anti-freeze. :)

2007-02-22 16:43:03 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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