Jeffrey S Brooks
06-27-2011, 05:18 PM
Blending paint thinner with Vegetable Oil to Make VO Blend Diesel Fuel
Making vegetable oil blend Diesel Fuel (VOBDF) by blending paint thinner with vegetable oil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6hAkaOIyfY
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A paint thinner is a solvent used to thin oil-based paints or clean up after their use. (All such solvents have other uses.) Commercially, "paint thinner" is usually a name for mineral spirits.
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While painting or making the paint of proper consistency by addition of thinner liquid there is an exposure to the vapors. ACGIH has established Threshold Limit values (TLV) for most of these compounds. TLV is defined as the max. concentration in air which if breathed by a normal person (excludes sensitive persons like: children, aged population, pregnant women, diseased etc.) in the course of 40 hours work (in US work conditions) per week, day after day through their work life without long term ill effects. Normally in undeveloped world workers work with much higher exposure to these chemicals with consequent damage to their health.
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Mineral Spirits [CAS 64475-85-0][1][2], also called Stoddard solvent [CAS 8052-41-3][3] or white spirits[4], is a petroleum distillate commonly used as a paint thinner and mild solvent. Outside of the United States and Canada, it is referred to as white spirit. In industry, mineral spirits is used for cleaning and degreasing machine tools and parts. According to Wesco, a supplier of solvents and cleaning equipment, mineral spirits "are especially effective in removing oils, greases, carbon, and other material from metal."[citation needed] Mineral spirits may also be used in conjunction with cutting oil as a thread cutting and reaming lubricant.
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Artists use mineral spirits as an alternative to turpentine, one that is both less flammable and less toxic. Because of interactions with pigments, artists require a higher grade of mineral spirits than many industrial users, including the complete absence of residual sulfur. Odorless Mineral Spirits are mineral spirits that have been further refined to remove the more toxic aromatic compounds, and are recommended for applications such as oil painting, where humans have close contact with the solvent.
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In screen printing (also referred to as silk-screening), mineral spirits are often used to clean and unclog screens after printing with oil-based textile and plastisol inks. They are also used to thin inks used in making monoprints.
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Mineral spirits are often used inside liquid filled compasses and gauges.
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A typical composition for mineral spirits is the following: > 65% C10 or higher hydrocarbons[5], aliphatic solvent hexane, and a maximum aromatic hydrocarbon content of 0.1% by volume, a kauri-butanol value of 29, an initial boiling point of 149 °F (65#°C), a dry point of approximately 156 °F (69#°C), and a specific mass of 0.7 g/cc.
Making vegetable oil blend Diesel Fuel (VOBDF) by blending paint thinner with vegetable oil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6hAkaOIyfY
#
A paint thinner is a solvent used to thin oil-based paints or clean up after their use. (All such solvents have other uses.) Commercially, "paint thinner" is usually a name for mineral spirits.
#
While painting or making the paint of proper consistency by addition of thinner liquid there is an exposure to the vapors. ACGIH has established Threshold Limit values (TLV) for most of these compounds. TLV is defined as the max. concentration in air which if breathed by a normal person (excludes sensitive persons like: children, aged population, pregnant women, diseased etc.) in the course of 40 hours work (in US work conditions) per week, day after day through their work life without long term ill effects. Normally in undeveloped world workers work with much higher exposure to these chemicals with consequent damage to their health.
#
Mineral Spirits [CAS 64475-85-0][1][2], also called Stoddard solvent [CAS 8052-41-3][3] or white spirits[4], is a petroleum distillate commonly used as a paint thinner and mild solvent. Outside of the United States and Canada, it is referred to as white spirit. In industry, mineral spirits is used for cleaning and degreasing machine tools and parts. According to Wesco, a supplier of solvents and cleaning equipment, mineral spirits "are especially effective in removing oils, greases, carbon, and other material from metal."[citation needed] Mineral spirits may also be used in conjunction with cutting oil as a thread cutting and reaming lubricant.
#
Artists use mineral spirits as an alternative to turpentine, one that is both less flammable and less toxic. Because of interactions with pigments, artists require a higher grade of mineral spirits than many industrial users, including the complete absence of residual sulfur. Odorless Mineral Spirits are mineral spirits that have been further refined to remove the more toxic aromatic compounds, and are recommended for applications such as oil painting, where humans have close contact with the solvent.
#
In screen printing (also referred to as silk-screening), mineral spirits are often used to clean and unclog screens after printing with oil-based textile and plastisol inks. They are also used to thin inks used in making monoprints.
#
Mineral spirits are often used inside liquid filled compasses and gauges.
#
A typical composition for mineral spirits is the following: > 65% C10 or higher hydrocarbons[5], aliphatic solvent hexane, and a maximum aromatic hydrocarbon content of 0.1% by volume, a kauri-butanol value of 29, an initial boiling point of 149 °F (65#°C), a dry point of approximately 156 °F (69#°C), and a specific mass of 0.7 g/cc.