enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tank truck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_truck

    Tank truck. A tank truck, gas truck, fuel truck, or tanker truck (American English) or tanker (British English) is a motor vehicle designed to carry liquids or gases on roads. The largest such vehicles are similar to railroad tank cars, which are also designed to carry liquid loads. Many variants exist due to the wide variety of liquids that ...

  3. Petroleum transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_transport

    Oil train near La Crosse, Wisconsin. Petroleum transport is the transportation of petroleum and derivatives such as gasoline (petrol). [1] Petroleum products are transported via rail cars, trucks, tanker vessels, and pipeline networks. The method used to move the petroleum products depends on the volume that is being moved and its destination.

  4. Heating oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heating_oil

    Heating oil. Heating oil is any petroleum product or other oil used for heating; it is a fuel oil. Most commonly, it refers to low viscosity grades of fuel oil used for furnaces or boilers use for home heating and in other buildings. Home heating oil is often abbreviated as HHO. [1]

  5. Diesel fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diesel_fuel

    A tank of diesel fuel on a truck. Diesel fuel, also called diesel oil, heavy oil (historically) or simply diesel, is any liquid fuel specifically designed for use in a diesel engine, a type of internal combustion engine in which fuel ignition takes place without a spark as a result of compression of the inlet air and then injection of fuel.

  6. Fuel oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel_oil

    An oil tanker taking on fuel, or "bunkering". Fuel oil is any of various fractions obtained from the distillation of petroleum (crude oil). Such oils include distillates (the lighter fractions) and residues (the heavier fractions). Fuel oils include heavy fuel oil (bunker fuel), marine fuel oil (MFO), furnace oil (FO), gas oil (gasoil), heating ...

  7. Multifuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multifuel

    This is seen as desirable in a military setting as enemy action or unit isolation may limit the available fuel supply, and conversely enemy fuel sources, or civilian sources, may become available for usage. [2] One large use of a military multifuel engine was the LD series used in the US M35 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-ton and M54 5-ton trucks built between ...

  8. T2 tanker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T2_tanker

    The T2 tanker Hat Creek in August 1943. The T2 tanker, or T2, was a class of oil tanker constructed and produced in large numbers in the United States during World War II. Only the T3 tankers were larger "navy oilers" of the period. Some 533 T2s were built between 1940 and the end of 1945. They were used to transport fuel oil, diesel fuel ...

  9. Oil tanker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_tanker

    Rear house, full hull, midships pipeline. An oil tanker, also known as a petroleum tanker, is a ship designed for the bulk transport of oil or its products. There are two basic types of oil tankers: crude tankers and product tankers. [1] Crude tankers move large quantities of unrefined crude oil from its point of extraction to refineries. [1]