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Modern fuels contain stabilizers, it there any way to destabilize it and crack the fuel down to its raw components?

2007-05-05 06:06:15 · 3 answers · asked by TimeWastersInc 6 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

looking to turn it into a true vapor. its a liquid.. an internal combustion engine runs on vapor. modern carbs only turn gasoline into a fine mist. I need vapor.. Not sure that there are stabilizers in it. but I know gasoline is a by product.. the cat cracker splits the gasoline and deisel well not sure which is the by product.. but I need to convert it to a vapor.. propane is a liquid but at a certain temp it turns to vapor.. I need to find the temp that gasoline also becomes a vapor.. if you think you'll know what I am doing...

2007-05-06 19:39:48 · update #1

3 answers

Actually, modern fuels contain practically no stabilizers. That's why you add stabilizers to gasoline you intend to keep more than a month or two, like for a lawn mower. And gasoline is already a refined product. What do you want to do with it? What stabilizers do you think are being used? How would they prevent whatever you want to do?

2007-05-06 13:49:56 · answer #1 · answered by Frank N 7 · 0 0

DO NOT DO THAT!!
If you have to ask and you try it you WILL burn something down like a house or school. Read about it in petro-chemical distillations and you'll see why.

2007-05-10 22:44:41 · answer #2 · answered by mike453683 5 · 0 0

AND...just WHAT do you plan to do with the by-products of the process.?... do you even KNOW what the "raw components" ARE?

2007-05-05 06:14:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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