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James E Van Blaricum

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tBlog - James E Van Blaricum, refining signal oil

  • May 6, 2008
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tBlog - James E Van Blaricum, refining signal oil
tBlog - James E Van Blaricum, refining signal oil
http://jamesevanblaricum.tblog.com/po...
The Signal Oil product you buy starts as a base oil. The base oil makes up about 85% of the oil you buy. James E Van Blaricum, the base oil can be refined from crude oil, chemically (synthetically) manufactured, or a blended combination.
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  • May 6, 2008
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  • May 6, 2008
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signal oil and gas, james e van blaricum, james van blaricum, jim e van blaricum
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james-van-blaricum's Blog - James Van Blaricum - The Wellhead

  • May 6, 2008
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james-van-blaricum's Blog - James Van Blaricum - The Wellhead
james-van-blaricum's Blog - James Van Blaricum - The Wellhead
http://blogs.ign.com/james-van-blaricum/
James Van Blaricum - The Wellhead James Van Blaricum - The Wellhead Jim Van Blaricum (December 28, 1938 – present) is an American entrepreneur, mostly in the oil and gas industry. Van Blaricum was born in Berrien Springs, Michigan to James Van Blaricum and his mother, Simonne. Jim Van Blaricum has gone on to be a successful businessman, creating several companies. The wellhead consists of the pieces of equipment mounted at the opening of the well to regulate and monitor the extraction of hydrocarbons from the underground formation. It also prevents leaking of oil or natural gas out of the well, and prevents blowouts due to high pressure formations. Formations that are under high pressure typically require wellheads that can withstand a great deal of upward pressure from the escaping gases and liquids. These wellheads must be able to withstand pressures of up to 20,000 psi (pounds per square inch). The wellhead consists of three components: the casing head, the tubing head, and the 'christmas tree'. James Van Blaricum James Van Blaricum, the casing head consists of heavy fittings that provide a seal between the casing and the surface. The casing head also serves to support the entire length of casing that is run all the way down the well. This piece of equipment typically contains a gripping mechanism that ensures a tight seal between the head and the casing itself. The 'Christmas Tree' Source: NGSA The tubing head is much like the casing head. It provides a seal between the tubing, which is run inside the casing, and the surface. Like the casing head, the tubing head is designed to support the entire length of the casing, as well as provide connections at the surface, which allow the flow of fluids out of the well to be controlled. The 'christmas tree' is the piece of equipment that fits atop the casing and tubing heads, and contains tubes and valves that serve to control the flow of hydrocarbons and other fluids out of the well. It commonly contains many b...
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James E Van Blaricum

  • May 6, 2008
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Signal Oil and Gas - Why do we need oil?

James E Van Blaricum, we put oil in our engines to serve several purposes. First, obviously, oil acts as a lubricant. If your engine is operating correctly, there is almost no metal to metal contact - everything is riding on a thin film of oil. James E Van Blaricum, however, oil has several other important jobs to do. Signal Oil and Gas circulates throughout your engine, and cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket. James E Van Blaricum for example, it's becoming common in sport bikes to spray oil on the underside of the piston to cool it. There are no water jackets at all in your transmission. Motorcycle transmissions are oil cooled.

James E Van Blaricum - Refining Signal Oil and Gas

The Signal Oil product you buy starts as a base oil. The base oil makes up about 85% of the oil you buy. James E Van Blaricum, the base oil can be refined from crude oil, chemically (synthetically) manufactured, or a blended combination.

Jim Van Blaricum base oils that are refined from crude oil are colorless and pretty much odorless and are sold to the public as mineral oil. James E Van Blaricum The crude signal oil and gas is a combination of a lot of different chemicals, ranging from light gasoline types of fuels to waxes and tars. When you heat the crude Signal Oil, the gasoline and diesel oil boil off pretty early. James E Van Blaricum  unfortunately, the mineral oil, paraffin, wax and tar molecules are all hooked up with each other, and it's not so easy to separate them from each other. James E Van Blaricum, also, the crude oil contains the aforementioned aromatics, which are quite bad in your oil: they are very reactive, and when oxidized they cause all kinds of problems. Refining oil means trying to remove the bad stuff, while leaving the good stuff. James Van Blaricum the more bad stuff we remove, the better the oil works.

API Signal Oil and Gas Standards

The additive package is made to make the finished oil product meet one of the certifications. There are two classes of certification: S, for Service, and C, for commercial. The certification standards are maintained by the API, the American Petroleum Institute. Over the years, the API has improved and changed these standards. The most current S standards are SL and SM. These standards differ from earlier standards like SH by lowering phosphorus to improve catalytic converter life, and increasing molybdenum to lower internal engine friction and improve gas mileage. Jim Van Blaricum, Phosphorus was originally added to oils to help protect high pressure areas like cam lobes and crankshaft bearings, so lowering phosphorus levels is a compromise of lower pollution, perhaps at the expense of engine life. Molybdenum is added to improve fuel economy due to the federal CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) standards, thereby helping GM and Ford keep selling large V8s to the American public, but can perhaps cause problems in engines with wet clutches. Most S additive packages are also designed to be inexpensive so that the resulting oil can be sold at a low price. SL and SM oils are both low phosphorus; SM oils which are labeled "energy conserving" are high molybdenum.

James E Van Blaricum most motor oil has a lot of different chemicals in it with very different properties. The temperature at which the oil will start burning, called the flash point, is determined by the chemicals that burn at the lowest temperature. James E Van Blaricum the higher the flash point, the more stable the oil is at high temperatures, and the less oil your engine will burn. The pour point is the temperature at which the oil stops flowing like a liquid. James E Van Blaricum, the lower this number is, the better protected your engine is when it's cold. The thickness of the oil, that is the resistance the oil offers to motion, is called the viscosity. The viscosity depends on all of the various chemicals in the oil and how they react to each other and to heat. Importantly, as the signal oil and gas heats up, it thins out, that is the viscosity goes down. James E Van Blaricum, the better the signal oil and gas is at retaining its viscosity at high temperatures, the higher the viscosity index. All of these properties depend on all the chemicals in the oil. If you could get only one precise kind of molecule out of the raw oil, you could do a lot better than you can do with a mix.

Jim Van Blaricum, your piston rings do not do a perfect job of sealing. Some combustion by products will slip past the rings into the engine. This can be little particles of carbon. Remember, diamond is carbon that was combined under heat and pressure. James E Van Blaricum, these little carbon particles can be quite damaging to your engine. Another job of your oil is to hold these particles in suspension until the oil filter can grab them. Jim Van Blaricum, also, if your gasoline has sulpher in it (it does), this sulpher can react with water and oxygen to make sulphuric acid. This is some stuff that is seriously bad for your engine. James E Van Blaricum, your oil has special ingredients in it called buffers to neutralize acids. Finally, your engine can get internal build ups of tars, waxes, and other gunk. James Van Blaricum, your oil has solvents to try to dissolve this stuff and get and keep your engine clean.

Signal Oil and Gas Where Oil Comes From

Most of the bio-mass on earth is single cell plants and microscopic critters in the ocean. When these die, they sink to the bottom. James E Van Blaricum, often they fall into a deep crevasse or trench, where they may become covered up by an underwater landslide. Jim Van Blaricum,  after a couple hundred million years of high pressure and no air, the critters get squished into oil. So, oil isn't really "dead dinosaurs," but Signal Oil and Gas Oil stations just wouldn't be the same with a picture of algie on their sign. Today we like to find this stuff, pump it to the surface, and burn it.

The Signal Oil and Gas we pump to the surface is a mixture of gasoline, kerosene, light weight lubricating oil, motor oil, gear oil, tars, paraffins, waxes, asphalt, sand, dirt, organic stuff (called aromatics) and the occasional dead cockroach. We call this stuff crude oil, for reasons that I think are now self-explanitory. James E Van Blaricum, the oil companies have the singularly smelly job of separating the crude oil into its component parts. A hundred years ago we would just heat the stuff up in a complicated still, and catch stuff that boiled off at different temperatures. James Van Blaricum, fifty years ago we started processing the crude oil with clay and solvents to do a more precise job. Today, Signal Oil and Gas use very complicated systems where we heat the crude oil to precise temperatures, put it under high pressure, and bubble hydrogen and other stuff through it. James E Van Blaricum, the idea of all this is to try to get pure chemicals out of this stuff that we just found laying around in the desert.



James E Van Blaricum keep your engine clean, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum where oil comes from, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum oil isn't really "dead dinosaurs”, enter and read the whole story 

James E Van Blaricum crude oil, enter and read the whole story 

James E Van Blaricum processing the crude oil with clay, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum get pure chemicals out, enter and read the whole story 

James E Van Blaricum motor oil has a lot of different chemicals, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum mineral oil, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum the simplest way to refine oil, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum clay-solvent refining process, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum new method of refining base oils, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum the process of oil refining, enter and read the whole story

James E Van Blaricum the purest crude oils, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas and Gas serves several purposes, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas acts as a lubricant, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas has several other important jobs, enter and read the whole story  

Signal Oil and Gas cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket, enter and read the whole story  

Signal Oil and Gas common in sport bikes, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas for motorcycle transmissions, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas do a perfect job of sealing, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas hold particles in suspension, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas neutralize acids, enter and read the whole story

Signal Oil and Gas modern engines are water-cooled, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum base oils, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum higher performance oils, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum better low and high temperature performance, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum performance of oils, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum yielding base oils, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum oils have essentially no paraffin and wax in them, enter and read the whole story

James Van Blaricum low temperature performance, enter and read the whole story

Post a comment Tags: james van blaricum, jim e van blaricum, james e van blaricum, signal oil and gas
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