A product used to remove moisture from fuel.
iso HEET is 99% isopropyl alcohol
No, the formula has changed, they now add a fuel injector cleaner to it.
Commercially available products such as Heet found at auto parts stores are one way. Basically alcohol will combine with the water and allow it to "pass" through the fuel system into the combustion chamber where it will be burned. Another source is as close as your local drug store. Rubbing alcohol will produce similar results as "Heet", depending on price it may be the way to go. In a pinch the solution may be as close as your liquor cabinet .... however it may be the least cost effective and may cut into your fun :-).
Part of the radiation we receive from the Sun is infrared.Any object emits radiation, depending on its temperature; for temperatures below 800 °C or so, all of this radiation will be infrared. If the object is fairly hot, you can clearly feal the heet - but even if you don't feel it, it is still there.
The flames in a fire burn according to chemical principles, and sometimes the material burned is or has in it a substance that burns with a green flame. There are a number of metal salts that burn with a green flame, and copper may be the most common among them. Think about fireworks. They are burning materials, and the color of the light given off is determined by the materials burned in the particular charge. Who would know more about what color things burn in than the chemist who is responsible for making up the stuff that goes into fireworks? There are packages of "fireplace additives" that are put on wood to give more color to the flames. The same ideas are involved.
Paul Heet is 5' 9".
The ISO heet contains isopropyl alcohol and the other contains methyl alcohol
iso HEET is 99% isopropyl alcohol
iso HEET is 99% isopropyl alcohol
Hoe heet je? or, more polite, Hoe heet U?
No. You can't put regular HEET in a diesel engine or an engine that requires oil and gas mixed, but you can put ISO HEET in all combustion engines.
Vollrath owns Lo Heet now.
Paul Heet was born on December 19, 1967, in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
The difference between HEET and ISO-HEET: ISO-HEET (which comes in a red bottle) contains isopropanol while HEET Gas-Line antifreeze (which comes in a yellow bottle) contains methanol Both products prevent gas line freeze-up hassles but remove water in different ways.
cool the heet
cool the heet
Heets amber Heets yellow Heets turquoise Heets purple Heet Bronze Heet Green