Cliciiiicnl niid physicnl tcsts, tlioiigli not ncccssnrily iiifnlliblc tcst,s :is i i i i iiidiciition of the 1ubricnt.ing propcrtics of nil oil, nre very licccssnrg for controlliug tlic quality of supplics. A fcw words will bc said nboiit tlie tcsts wliicli nrc most coirimcrcinlly iinportnnt, thcsc
New Zealand mineral oils
β Scribed by Easterfield, Thomas h. ;McClelland, Norman
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1923
- Weight
- 295 KB
- Volume
- 42
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0368-4075
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Analysis of two lots of mineral oil indicated the overall composition to be quite similar with two major hydrocarbon ranges: a low range from Cl4 to Go with a maximum at C16 and a high range from GO to CJ0 with a maximum at Ga. The low range components represented 40.8 and 49.3 wt.x of Lots Q-9 and