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  2. Synthetic oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_oil

    Synthetic oils are also used in metal stamping to provide environmental and other benefits when compared to conventional petroleum and animal-fat based products. [4] These products are also referred to as "non-oil" or "oil free". A polyalcanoate synthetic oil is widely used to lubricate pendulum clocks.

  3. Motor oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_oil

    Tests [citation needed] show that fully synthetic oil is superior in extreme service conditions to conventional oil, and may perform better for longer under standard conditions. But in the vast majority of vehicle applications, mineral oil-based lubricants, fortified with additives and with the benefit of over a century of development, continue ...

  4. Lubricant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lubricant

    Typically lubricants contain 90% base oil (most often petroleum fractions, called mineral oils) and less than 10% additives. Vegetable oils or synthetic liquids such as hydrogenated polyolefins, esters, silicones, fluorocarbons and many others are sometimes used as base oils.

  5. When Should You Change Your Oil? - AOL

    www.aol.com/change-oil-183100994.html

    About synthetics: Almost all newer vehicles use synthetic oil, so if the manufacturer specifies that, you must use it. Many older vehicles weren't filled with synthetics when new and still use ...

  6. Synthetic fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_fuel

    After Allied bombing of Germany's synthetic-fuel production plants (especially in May to June 1944), the Geilenberg Special Staff used 350,000 mostly foreign forced-laborers to reconstruct the bombed synthetic-oil plants, [23]: 210, 224 and, in an emergency decentralization program, the Mineralölsicherungsplan (1944-1945), to build 7 ...

  7. Oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil

    Mineral oil is organic. However, it is classified as "mineral oil" instead of as "organic oil" because its organic origin is remote (and was unknown at the time of its discovery), and because it is obtained in the vicinity of rocks, underground traps, and sands. Mineral oil also refers to several specific distillates of crude oil. [citation needed]