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<description>SIGNAL OIL   Since 1990, Chevron's process has been improved. In 1993, Chevron invented the Hydro-Isomerization process, where wax and paraffin molecules are reshaped into useful lubricants instead of simply being broken up into smaller molecules. By increasing the severity of the hydrocracking process, increasing the temperature and pressure and processing time to process more and more of the unwanted wax and paraffin molecules, the oil's low and high temperature performance and resistance to oxidation can be improved to the point where the distinction between mineral oils and synthetics becomes blurred. Signal Oil Chevron now licenses this process, called Iso- DeWaxing. This process of oil refining is becoming more and more popular, and in 2004 accounts for almost half of all base oils. Iso- DeWaxing not only produces much higher-performance oil, but also allows you to start with lower quality crude oil, making us less dependent on the few countries that happen to produce the purest crude oils.  SIGNAL OIL - Which oil is right for you? Technorati ProfileThe current and previous API Service Categories are listed below. Vehicle owners should refer to their owner's manuals before consulting these charts. Oils may have more than one performance level.  For automotive gasoline engines, the latest engine oil service category includes the performance properties of each earlier category. If an automotive owner's manual calls for an API SJ or SL oil, an API SM oil will provide full protection. For diesel engines, the latest category usually - but not always - includes the performance properties of an earlier category.  SIGNAL OIL - Mineral oil All oils, with their high carbon and hydrogen content, can be traced back to organic sources or space. Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, are no exception, as they were originally the organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Jim van Blaricum Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum, and its components, such as kerosene, paraffin waxes, gasoline, diesel and such. These are classified as mineral oils as they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands. Other oily substances can also be found in the environment, the most well-known being asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits . Petroleum and other mineral oils, (specifically labelled as petrochemicals), have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of 'oil' itself.SIGNAL OIL - Organic oils Oils are also produced by plants, animals and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Jim van Blaricum Oil is a somewhat vague term to use chemically, and the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids. Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve, in water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals.SIGNAL OIL - Fuel Almost all oils burn in air generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of energy by various means, for example, heating water into steam which is funneled into a turbine which turns a huge magnet. This spins and generates electricity. Oils are used as fuels for heating, lighting (e.g. kerosene lamp), powering combustion engines, and other purposes. James van Blaricum Oils used for this purpose nowadays are usually derived from petroleum, (fuel oil, diesel oil, petrol (gasoline), etc), though biological oils such as biodiesel are gaining market share.SIGNAL OIL - Lubrication Signal Oil and Gas - Why do we need oil?  James 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. Jim 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. 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.   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 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 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. Jim 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 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 &#34;dead dinosaurs,&#34; 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 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. Jim 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 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.     Due to their non-polarity, oils do not easily adhere to other substances. This makes oil useful as lubricant for various engineering purposes. Mineral oils are more suitable than biological oils, which degrade rapidly in most environmental conditions.  Motor oil is a lubricant used in internal combustion engines. These include motor or road vehicles such as cars and motorcycles, heavier vehicles such as buses and commercial vehicles, non-road vehicles such as go-karts, snowmobiles, boats (fixed engine installations and outboards), ride-on lawn mowers, large agricultural and construction equipment, trains and aircraft, and static engines such as electrical generators. In engines there are parts which move very closely against each other causing friction which wastes otherwise useful power by converting the energy to heat. Contact between moving surfaces also wears away those parts, which could lead to lower efficiency and degradation of the motor. This increases fuel consumption and decreases power output and can, in extreme cases, lead to total engine failure. Lubricating oil creates a separating film between surfaces of adjacent moving parts to minimize direct contact between them, decreasing friction, wear, and production of excessive heat, thus protecting the engine. Motor oil also carries away heat from moving parts, which is important because materials tend to become softer and less abrasion-resistant at high temperatures. Some engines have an additional oil cooler for this purpose. In petrol (gasoline) engines, the top compression ring can expose the motor oil to temperatures of 320 &#176;F (160 &#176;C). In diesel engines the top ring can expose the oil to temperatures over 600 &#176;F (315 &#176;C). Motor oils with higher viscosity indices thin less at these higher temperatures. Coating metal parts with oil also keeps them from being exposed to oxygen, inhibiting oxidation at elevated operating temperatures preventing rust or corrosion. Corrosion inhibitors may also be added to the motor oil. Many motor oils also have detergent and dispersant additives to help keep the engine clean and minimize oil sludge build-up. Rubbing of metal engine parts inevitably produces some microscopic metallic particles from the wearing of the surfaces. Sludge also accumulates in the engine. Such particles could circulate in the oil and grind against the moving parts, causing erosion and wear. Because particles inevitably build up in the oil, it is typically circulated through an oil filter to remove harmful particles. An oil pump, a vane or gear pump powered by the vehicle engine, pumps the oil throughout the engine, including the oil filter. Oil filters can be a full flow or bypass type. In the crankcase of a vehicle engine, motor oil lubricates rotating or sliding surfaces between the crankshaft journals bearings (main bearings and big-end bearings), and rods connecting the pistons to the crankshaft. The oil collects in an oil pan, or sump at the bottom of the crankcase. James van Blaricum In some small engines such as lawn mower engines, dippers on the bottoms of connecting rods dip into the oil at the bottom and splash it around the crankcase as needed to lubricate parts inside. In modern vehicle engines, the oil pump takes oil from the oil pan and sends it through the oil filter into oil galleries, from which the oil lubricates the main bearings holding the crankshaft up at the main journals and camshaft bearings operating the valves. In typical modern vehicles, oil pressure-fed from the oil galleries to the main bearings enters holes in the main journals of the crankshaft. From these holes in the main journals, the oil moves through passageways inside the crankshaft to exit holes in the rod journals to lubricate the rod bearings and connecting rods. Some simpler designs relied on these rapidly moving parts to splash and lubricate the contacting surfaces between the piston rings and interior surfaces of the cylinders. However, in modern designs, there are also passageways through the rods which carry oil from the rod bearings to the rod-piston connections and lubricate the contacting surfaces between the piston rings and interior surfaces of the cylinders. This oil film also serves as a seal between the piston rings and cylinder walls to separate the combustion chamber in the cylinder head from the crankcase. The oil then drips back down into the oil pan. To see these details on a crankshaft, see &#34;How Car Engines Work&#34; at HowStuffWorks or &#34;Types of Lubricating Systems&#34; at Integrated Publishing.  SIGNAL OIL - Other oils While it may still be used in motor vehicles, ATF or Automatic Transmission Fluid is a separate type of specialist lubricating fluid. Varying specifications of ATF are used in automatic gearboxes and some power steering systems, and should not be used to lubricate the engine. It is typically colored dark red to distinguish it from the motor oil and other fluids in the vehicle. Other non-motor oils include gear or transmission, and differentials oils. These are used in manual gearboxes and driven axles. They could include speciality uses including EP (Extreme Pressure), hypoid, and limited slip functions. Again, they are not to be used for engine lubrication.SIGNAL OIL - Properties Spills of engine oil onto wet concrete create characteristic iridescent (rainbow-hued) stains  -  a thin layer of oil floats above the water.Most motor oils are made from a heavier, thicker petroleum hydrocarbon base stock derived from crude oil, with additives to improve certain properties. One of the most important properties of motor oil in maintaining a lubricating film between moving parts is its viscosity. The viscosity of a liquid can be thought of as its &#34;thickness&#34; or a quantity of resistance to flow. The viscosity must be high enough to maintain a satisfactory lubricating film, but low enough that the oil can flow around the engine parts satisfactorily to keep them well coated under all conditions. James van Blaricum The viscosity index is a measure of how much the oil's viscosity changes as temperature changes. A higher viscosity index indicates the viscosity changes less with temperature than a lower viscosity index. Motor oil must be able to flow at cold winter temperatures to lubricate internal moving parts upon starting up the engine. Another important property of motor oil is its pour point, which is indicative of the lowest temperature at which the oil could still be poured satisfactorily. The lower the pour point temperature of the oil, the more desirable the oil is when starting up at cold temperature. Oil is largely composed of hydrocarbons which can burn if ignited. Still another important property of motor oil is its flash point, the lowest temperature at which the oil gives off vapors which can ignite. It is dangerous for the oil in a motor to ignite and burn, so a high flash point is desirable. At a petroleum refinery, fractional distillation separates a motor oil fraction from other crude oil fractions, removing the volatile components which ignite more easily, and therefore increasing the oil's flash point.Technorati ProfileAnother test done on oil is to determine the Total Base Number (TBN), which is a measurement of the reserve alkalinity of an oil to neutralize acids. The resulting quantity is determined as mg KOH/ (gram of lubricant). Analogously, Total Acid Number (TAN) is the measure of a lubricant's acidity. Other tests include zinc, phosphorus, or sulfur content, and testing for excessive foaming. Different motor oils are sold for Diesel fuel engines, with many claimed to contain a higher level of detergents and dispersants to keep fine combustion soot in suspension. However, for some brands only the packaging varies (the oil is the same), and in general a diesel engine can use any good quality oil of the correct grade and specification.SIGNAL OIL - Single-gradeFor single-grade oils, the kinematic viscosity is measured at a reference temperature of 100&#176;C (212&#176;F) in units of mm&#178;/s or the equivalent older non-SI units, centistokes (abbreviated cSt). Based on the range of viscosity the oil falls in at that temperature, the oil is graded as an SAE number 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60. The higher the viscosity, the higher the SAE grade number is. These numbers are often referred to as the weight of a motor oil. The reference temperature is meant to approximate the operating temperature to which motor oil is exposed in an engine. The viscosity of single-grade oil derived from petroleum unimproved with additives changes considerably with temperature. As the temperature increases, the viscosity of the oil decreases logarithmically in a relatively predictable manner. On single-grade oils, viscosity testing can be done at cold, winter (W) temperature (as well as checking minimum viscosity at 100&#176;C or 212&#176;F) to grade an oil as SAE number 0W, 5W, 10W, 15W, 20W, or 25W. A single-grade oil graded at the hot temperature is expected to test into the corresponding grade at the winter temperature; i.e. a 10 grade oil should correspond to a 10W oil. For some applications, such as when the temperature ranges in use are not very wide, single-grade motor oil is satisfactory; for example, lawn mower engines, and vintage or classic cars. To make a 10w-40 oil, the manufacturer would start out with a 10 weight oil as the base stock. All by itself, this oil would thin out so much at normal operating temperatures that the oil film would be useless. So, they add these very special very long molecules, the VIIs. The VII molecules are as much as 1000 times as long as an oil molecule. The VII molecules curl up in a little ball at room temperature, but as the temperature gets higher they uncurl and stretch out, like a cat sleeping in the sunlight. The more stretched out the molecule is, the more it impedes the normal flow of the oil, thus raising the effective viscosity. Now, this sounds just a little too good to be true. Well, there are two catches: first, these molecules are not lubricants, so the more of them that you add the less oil you have sitting around lubricating things. Secondly, these VII molecules can be broken into pieces by various pressures and forces, like being squeezed through the transmission gears in a motorcycle or the hydraulic valves in a diesel engine. Every time a VII molecule gets broken, the oil loses some of its high temperature viscosity. Synthetic oils made from pure PAOs and/or Diesters typically have very few VIIs, so these oils are far less subject to viscosity breakdown due to shearing of the VII package. As a result, synthetics are far more stable in a motorcycle engine.    SIGNAL OIL - Multi-gradeThe temperature range the oil is exposed to in most vehicles can be wide, ranging from cold ambient temperatures in the winter before the vehicle is started up to hot operating temperatures when the vehicle is fully warmed up in hot summer weather. A specific oil will have high viscosity when cold and a low viscosity at the engine's operating temperature. The difference in viscosities for any single-grade oil is too large between the extremes of temperature. To bring the difference in viscosities closer together, special polymer additives called viscosity index improvers, or VIs are added to the oil. These additives make the oil a multi-grade motor oil. The idea is to cause the multi-grade oil to have the viscosity of the base number when cold and the viscosity of second number when hot. This enables one type of oil to be generally used all year, and when multi-grades were initially developed, they were frequently described as all-season oil. The viscosity of a multi-grade oil still varies logarithmically with temperature, but the slope representing the change is lessened. This slope representing the change with temperature depends on the nature and amount of the additives to the base oil. The SAE designation for multi-grade oils includes two grade numbers; for example, 10W-30 designates a common multi-grade oil. Historically, the first number associated with the W (again 'W' is for Winter, not Weight) is not rated at any single temperature. The &#34;10W&#34; means that this oil can be pumped by your engine as well as a single-grade SAE 10 oil can be pumped. &#34;5W&#34; can be pumped at a lower temperature than &#34;10W&#34; and &#34;0W&#34; can be pumped at a lower temperature than &#34;5W&#34;. The second number, 30, means that the viscosity of this multi-grade oil at 100&#176;C (212&#176;F) operating temperature corresponds to the viscosity of a single-grade 30 oil at same temperature. The governing SAE standard is called SAE J300. This &#34;classic&#34; method of defining the &#34;W&#34; rating has since been replaced with a more technical test where a &#34;cold crank simulator&#34; is used at increasingly lowered temps. A 0W oil is tested at -35&#176;C, a 5W at -30&#176;C and a 10W is tested at -25&#176;C. The real-world ability of an oil to crank in the cold is diminished soon after put into service. The motor oil grade and viscosity to be used in a given vehicle is specified by the manufacturer of the vehicle (although some modern European cars now make no viscosity requirement), but can vary from country to country when climatic or mpg constraints come into play. Oil circulates through the piston oil rings to cool and lubricate the compression rings. Inside gasoline engines, the top compression ring is exposed to temperatures as high as 320 &#176;F (160 &#176;C).SIGNAL OILMany new vehicles are marked to use 5W-20 oil (Honda, Ford, and more recently Toyota) which is not much thinner than a 30 weight oil. Nay-sayers of 20 weight oil's ability to protect engines should note that typically, 30 weight oils shear down into the 20 weight range anyway. Most engine wear is during start-up and warm-up period, where the thinner 20 weight oil's flow is desirable. Overall, lab test results of the wear metals contained in used oil samples show low or lower wear with 20 weight than 30 in applications it is specified for. Some ultra fuel efficient and hybrid vehicles are marked to use 0W-20 oil. For some selective mechanical problems with engines, using a more viscous oil can ameliorate the symptoms, i.e. changing from 5W-20 to 20W-50 may eliminate a knocking noise from the engine but doesn't solve the problem, just &#34;masks&#34; it. Excess amounts of oil consumed by an engine burning it can be addressed by using a thicker oil, a 10W-40 might not burn off as fast compared to a 5W-30. A newer product that also addresses this issue is the &#34;High-Miles&#34; oils now marketed. They tend to be slightly thick for their grades, contain extra additives and seal conditioners. Apparently the formulation of these oils works well in many instances.    News regarding Signal Oil serves several purposes  News regarding Signal Oil acts as a lubricant  News regarding Signal Oil has several other important jobs   News regarding Signal Oil cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket   News regarding Signal Oil common in sport bikes   News regarding Signal Oil for motorcycle transmissions   News regarding Signal Oil do a perfect job of sealing   News regarding Signal Oil hold particles in suspension   News regarding Signal Oil neutralize acids   News regarding Signal Oil modern engines are water-cooled  News regarding Jim van Blaricum keep your engine clean  News regarding Jim van Blaricum where oil comes from   News regarding Jim van Blaricum oil isn't really &#34;dead dinosaurs&#8221;   News regarding Jim van Blaricum crude oil   News regarding Jim van Blaricum processing the crude oil with clay   News regarding Jim van Blaricum get pure chemicals out   News regarding Jim van Blaricum motor oil has a lot of different chemicals   News regarding Jim van Blaricum mineral oil   News regarding Jim van Blaricum the simplest way to refine oil   News regarding Jim van Blaricum clay-solvent refining process   News regarding James van Blaricum new method of refining base oils   News regarding James van Blaricum the process of oil refining   News regarding James van Blaricum the purest crude oils   News regarding James van Blaricum base oils   News regarding James van Blaricum higher performance oils   News regarding James van Blaricum better low and high temperature performance   News regarding James van Blaricum performance of oils   News regarding James van Blaricum yielding base oils   News regarding James van Blaricum oils have essentially no paraffin and wax in them   News regarding James van Blaricum low temperature performance  SIGNAL OIL : gas condensate SIGNAL OIL : gas buster SIGNAL OIL : gas coning SIGNAL OIL : gas chimney SIGNAL OIL : gas deviation factor SIGNAL OIL : gas drive SIGNAL OIL : gas cap SIGNAL OIL : gas formation volume factor SIGNAL OIL : gas in solution SIGNAL OIL : gas gravity SIGNAL OIL : gas hydrate SIGNAL OIL : gas injection SIGNAL OIL : gas interference SIGNAL OIL : gas show SIGNAL OIL : gas lift SIGNAL OIL : gas separator SIGNAL OIL : gas lock SIGNAL OIL : gas sand SIGNAL OIL : gas migration SIGNAL OIL : gas processing plant SIGNAL OIL : oilfield SIGNAL OIL : oil-water contact SIGNAL OIL : Petroleum SIGNAL OIL : vegetable oilsand SIGNAL OIL : petrochemical oils SIGNAL OIL : volatile essential oils SIGNAL OIL : Mineral oil SIGNAL OIL : Organic oils SIGNAL OIL : Fuel SIGNAL OIL : Heat transport SIGNAL OIL : Petrochemicals SIGNAL OIL : Crude oil SIGNAL OIL : Oil Extraction SIGNAL OIL : Unprocessed petroleum SIGNAL OIL : hydrocarbons SIGNAL OIL : Oil SIGNAL OIL : Olefins SIGNAL OIL : oil-prone SIGNAL OIL : oil-mud emulsifier SIGNAL OIL : Synthetic Natural Gas SIGNAL OIL : Wet Gas SIGNAL OIL : Capillaries SIGNAL OIL : Exploratory Well SIGNAL OIL : Injection Well SIGNAL OIL : Reserves SIGNAL OIL : oil-in-water emulsion SIGNAL OIL : oil-emulsion mud SIGNAL OIL : oil-base mud SIGNAL OIL : oil well SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas lease SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas lease SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas separator SIGNAL OIL : oil content SIGNAL OIL : oil field SIGNAL OIL : oil formation volume factor SIGNAL OIL : oil kitchen SIGNAL OIL : oil mud SIGNAL OIL : oil on cuttings SIGNAL OIL : oil pool SIGNAL OIL : oil sand</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.signaloilandgas.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL</font></a></h1><p> </p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"> Since 1990, Chevron's process has been improved. In 1993, Chevron invented the Hydro-Isomerization process, where wax and paraffin molecules are reshaped into useful lubricants instead of simply being broken up into smaller molecules. By increasing the severity of the hydrocracking process, increasing the temperature and pressure and processing time to process more and more of the unwanted wax and paraffin molecules, the oil's low and high temperature performance and resistance to oxidation can be improved to the point where the distinction between mineral oils and synthetics becomes blurred. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.com/">Signal Oil</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Chevron now licenses this process, called Iso- DeWaxing. This process of oil refining is becoming more and more popular, and in 2004 accounts for almost half of all base oils. Iso- DeWaxing not only produces much higher-performance oil, but also allows you to start with lower quality crude oil, making us less dependent on the few countries that happen to produce the purest crude oils. <br /></font></p><p> </p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.net/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Which oil is right for you?</font></a><font size="5" face="Arial"> </font></h1><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Technorati Profile</font></p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">The current and previous API Service Categories are listed below. Vehicle owners should refer to their owner's manuals before consulting these charts. Oils may have more than one performance level. </font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">For automotive gasoline engines, the latest engine oil service category includes the performance properties of each earlier category. If an automotive owner's manual calls for an API SJ or SL oil, an API SM oil will provide full protection. For diesel engines, the latest category usually - but not always - includes the performance properties of an earlier category. </font></p><p> </p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.org/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Mineral oil</font></a></h1><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">All oils, with their high carbon and hydrogen content, can be traced back to organic sources or space. Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, are no exception, as they were originally the organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.jamesvanblaricum.net/">Jim van Blaricum</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum, and its components, such as kerosene, paraffin waxes, gasoline, diesel and such. These are classified as mineral oils as they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Other oily substances can also be found in the environment, the most well-known being asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits .</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Petroleum and other mineral oils, (specifically labelled as petrochemicals), have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of 'oil' itself.</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.net/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Organic oils</font></a></h1><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Oils are also produced by plants, animals and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.oil-signaloil.com/">Jim van Blaricum</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Oil is a somewhat vague term to use chemically, and the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve, in water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals.</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.org/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL &ndash; Fuel</font></a></h1><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Almost all oils burn in air generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of energy by various means, for example, heating water into steam which is funneled into a turbine which turns a huge magnet. This spins and generates electricity. Oils are used as fuels for heating, lighting (e.g. kerosene lamp), powering combustion engines, and other purposes. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.oil-jimvanblaricum.com/">James van Blaricum</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Oils used for this purpose nowadays are usually derived from petroleum, (fuel oil, diesel oil, petrol (gasoline), etc), though biological oils such as biodiesel are gaining market share.</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.signal-oil-and-gas.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL &ndash; Lubrication</font></a></h1><p> </p><h3><a href="http://www.wikidot.com/user:info/jim-van-blaricum">Signal Oil and Gas - Why do we need oil?</a></h3>  <p><a href="http://www.myspace.com/jim_van_blaricum">James van Blaricum, we put oil in our engines</a> to serve several purposes. First, obviously, oil acts as a lubricant. If <a href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.net/">your engine is operating correctly</a>, there is almost no metal to metal contact - everything is riding on a thin film of oil. <a href="http://www.soulcast.com/jim_van_blaricum/">Jim van Blaricum, however</a>, oil has several other important jobs to do. <a href="http://www.squidoo.com/jim-van-blaricum">Signal Oil and Gas circulates</a> throughout your engine, and cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket. For example, it's becoming common in sport bikes to <a href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.org/">spray oil on the underside of the piston</a> to cool it. There are no water jackets at all in your transmission. Motorcycle transmissions are oil cooled. </p>  <p><a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesvanblaricum">Jim van Blaricum, your piston rings</a> do not do a perfect job of sealing. Some combustion by products will slip past the rings into the engine. This can be <a href="http://www.signaloilandgas.net/">little particles of carbon</a>. Remember, diamond is carbon that was combined under heat and pressure. <a href="http://www.mybloglog.com/buzz/members/signal-oil-and-gas/">James van Blaricum, these little carbon particles</a> can be quite damaging to your engine. Another job of your oil is to hold these particles in suspension until the <a href="http://blogs.ign.com/jim_van_blaricum/">oil filter can grab them. Jim van Blaricum</a>, 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<a href="http://jimvanblaricum.tblog.com/post/1969982937">. James van Blaricum, your oil has special ingredients</a> in it called buffers to neutralize acids. Finally, your engine can get internal build ups of tars, waxes, and other gunk. <a href="http://james-van-blaricum.wetpaint.com/?t=anon">Jim van Blaricum, your oil has solvents</a> to try to dissolve this stuff and get and keep your engine clean. </p>  <h3><a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesvanblaricum">Signal Oil and Gas Where Oil Comes From</a></h3>  <p>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. <a href="http://jamesvanblaricum.busythumbs.com/">James van Blaricum, often they fall</a> into a deep crevasse or trench, where they may become covered up by an underwater landslide. <a href="http://clearblogs.com/james-van-blaricum/">Jim van Blaricum,  after a couple hundred million years</a> of high pressure and no air, the critters get squished into oil. So, oil isn't really &quot;dead dinosaurs,&quot; <a href="http://blogs.ign.com/james-van-blaricum/">but Signal Oil and Gas Oil stations</a> 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. </p>  <p><a href="http://jamesvanblaricm.sampasite.com/">The Signal Oil and Gas we pump</a> to the surface is a mixture of gasoline, kerosene, light weight <a href="http://www.signal-oil-and-gas.com/">lubricating oil, motor oil, gear oil</a>, 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. <a href="http://journals.aol.com/jamesvanblaricum/james-van-blaricum/">James van Blaricum, the oil companies</a> have the singularly smelly job of separating the crude oil into its component parts. <a href="http://www.signaloilandgas.org/">A hundred years ago</a> we would just heat the stuff up in a complicated still, and catch stuff that boiled off at different temperatures<a href="http://www.signaloilandgas.com/">. Jim van Blaricum, fifty years ago</a> we started processing the crude oil with clay and solvents to do a more precise job. Today, <a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.net/">Signal Oil and Gas use very complicated systems</a> where we heat the crude oil to precise temperatures, put it under high pressure, and bubble hydrogen and other stuff through it. <a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.org/">James van Blaricum, the idea of all</a> this is to try to get pure chemicals out of this stuff that we just found laying around in the desert. </p>  <p> </p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Due to their non-polarity, oils do not easily adhere to other substances. This makes oil useful as lubricant for various engineering purposes. Mineral oils are more suitable than biological oils, which degrade rapidly in most environmental conditions.</font></p><p> </p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Motor oil is a lubricant used in internal combustion engines. These include motor or road vehicles such as cars and motorcycles, heavier vehicles such as buses and commercial vehicles, non-road vehicles such as go-karts, snowmobiles, boats (fixed engine installations and outboards), ride-on lawn mowers, large agricultural and construction equipment, trains and aircraft, and static engines such as electrical generators. In engines there are parts which move very closely against each other causing friction which wastes otherwise useful power by converting the energy to heat. Contact between moving surfaces also wears away those parts, which could lead to lower efficiency and degradation of the motor. This increases fuel consumption and decreases power output and can, in extreme cases, lead to total engine failure.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Lubricating oil creates a separating film between surfaces of adjacent moving parts to minimize direct contact between them, decreasing friction, wear, and production of excessive heat, thus protecting the engine. Motor oil also carries away heat from moving parts, which is important because materials tend to become softer and less abrasion-resistant at high temperatures. Some engines have an additional oil cooler for this purpose.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">In petrol (gasoline) engines, the top compression ring can expose the motor oil to temperatures of 320 &deg;F (160 &deg;C). In diesel engines the top ring can expose the oil to temperatures over 600 &deg;F (315 &deg;C). Motor oils with higher viscosity indices thin less at these higher temperatures.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Coating metal parts with oil also keeps them from being exposed to oxygen, inhibiting oxidation at elevated operating temperatures preventing rust or corrosion. Corrosion inhibitors may also be added to the motor oil. Many motor oils also have detergent and dispersant additives to help keep the engine clean and minimize oil sludge build-up.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Rubbing of metal engine parts inevitably produces some microscopic metallic particles from the wearing of the surfaces. Sludge also accumulates in the engine. Such particles could circulate in the oil and grind against the moving parts, causing erosion and wear. Because particles inevitably build up in the oil, it is typically circulated through an oil filter to remove harmful particles. An oil pump, a vane or gear pump powered by the vehicle engine, pumps the oil throughout the engine, including the oil filter. Oil filters can be a full flow or bypass type.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">In the crankcase of a vehicle engine, motor oil lubricates rotating or sliding surfaces between the crankshaft journals bearings (main bearings and big-end bearings), and rods connecting the pistons to the crankshaft. The oil collects in an oil pan, or sump at the bottom of the crankcase. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.oil-jimvanblaricum.com/">James van Blaricum</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">In some small engines such as lawn mower engines, dippers on the bottoms of connecting rods dip into the oil at the bottom and splash it around the crankcase as needed to lubricate parts inside. In modern vehicle engines, the oil pump takes oil from the oil pan and sends it through the oil filter into oil galleries, from which the oil lubricates the main bearings holding the crankshaft up at the main journals and camshaft bearings operating the valves. In typical modern vehicles, oil pressure-fed from the oil galleries to the main bearings enters holes in the main journals of the crankshaft. From these holes in the main journals, the oil moves through passageways inside the crankshaft to exit holes in the rod journals to lubricate the rod bearings and connecting rods. Some simpler designs relied on these rapidly moving parts to splash and lubricate the contacting surfaces between the piston rings and interior surfaces of the cylinders. However, in modern designs, there are also passageways through the rods which carry oil from the rod bearings to the rod-piston connections and lubricate the contacting surfaces between the piston rings and interior surfaces of the cylinders. This oil film also serves as a seal between the piston rings and cylinder walls to separate the combustion chamber in the cylinder head from the crankcase. The oil then drips back down into the oil pan. To see these details on a crankshaft, see &quot;How Car Engines Work&quot; at HowStuffWorks or &quot;Types of Lubricating Systems&quot; at Integrated Publishing.</font></p><p> </p><p> </p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.signaloilandgas.net/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Other oils</font></a></h1><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">While it may still be used in motor vehicles, ATF or Automatic Transmission Fluid is a separate type of specialist lubricating fluid. Varying specifications of ATF are used in automatic gearboxes and some power steering systems, and should not be used to lubricate the engine. It is typically colored dark red to distinguish it from the motor oil and other fluids in the vehicle.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Other non-motor oils include gear or transmission, and differentials oils. These are used in manual gearboxes and driven axles. They could include speciality uses including EP (Extreme Pressure), hypoid, and limited slip functions. Again, they are not to be used for engine lubrication.</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.signaloilandgas.org/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Properties</font></a></h1><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Spills of engine oil onto wet concrete create characteristic iridescent (rainbow-hued) stains &mdash; a thin layer of oil floats above the water.Most motor oils are made from a heavier, thicker petroleum hydrocarbon base stock derived from crude oil, with additives to improve certain properties. One of the most important properties of motor oil in maintaining a lubricating film between moving parts is its viscosity. The viscosity of a liquid can be thought of as its &quot;thickness&quot; or a quantity of resistance to flow. The viscosity must be high enough to maintain a satisfactory lubricating film, but low enough that the oil can flow around the engine parts satisfactorily to keep them well coated under all conditions. </font><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;"><a href="http://www.oil-jimvanblaricum.com/">James van Blaricum</a> </span><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">The viscosity index is a measure of how much the oil's viscosity changes as temperature changes. A higher viscosity index indicates the viscosity changes less with temperature than a lower viscosity index.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Motor oil must be able to flow at cold winter temperatures to lubricate internal moving parts upon starting up the engine. Another important property of motor oil is its pour point, which is indicative of the lowest temperature at which the oil could still be poured satisfactorily. The lower the pour point temperature of the oil, the more desirable the oil is when starting up at cold temperature.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Oil is largely composed of hydrocarbons which can burn if ignited. Still another important property of motor oil is its flash point, the lowest temperature at which the oil gives off vapors which can ignite. It is dangerous for the oil in a motor to ignite and burn, so a high flash point is desirable. At a petroleum refinery, fractional distillation separates a motor oil fraction from other crude oil fractions, removing the volatile components which ignite more easily, and therefore increasing the oil's flash point.</font></p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><a href="http://technorati.com/claim/ieun82yc5w">Technorati Profile</a></font></p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Another test done on oil is to determine the Total Base Number (TBN), which is a measurement of the reserve alkalinity of an oil to neutralize acids. The resulting quantity is determined as mg KOH/ (gram of lubricant). Analogously, Total Acid Number (TAN) is the measure of a lubricant's acidity. Other tests include zinc, phosphorus, or sulfur content, and testing for excessive foaming.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Different motor oils are sold for Diesel fuel engines, with many claimed to contain a higher level of detergents and dispersants to keep fine combustion soot in suspension. However, for some brands only the packaging varies (the oil is the same), and in general a diesel engine can use any good quality oil of the correct grade and specification.</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Single-grade</font></a></h1><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">For single-grade oils, the kinematic viscosity is measured at a reference temperature of 100&deg;C (212&deg;F) in units of mm&sup2;/s or the equivalent older non-SI units, centistokes (abbreviated cSt). Based on the range of viscosity the oil falls in at that temperature, the oil is graded as an SAE number 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60. The higher the viscosity, the higher the SAE grade number is. These numbers are often referred to as the weight of a motor oil. The reference temperature is meant to approximate the operating temperature to which motor oil is exposed in an engine.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">The viscosity of single-grade oil derived from petroleum unimproved with additives changes considerably with temperature. As the temperature increases, the viscosity of the oil decreases logarithmically in a relatively predictable manner. On single-grade oils, viscosity testing can be done at cold, winter (W) temperature (as well as checking minimum viscosity at 100&deg;C or 212&deg;F) to grade an oil as SAE number 0W, 5W, 10W, 15W, 20W, or 25W. A single-grade oil graded at the hot temperature is expected to test into the corresponding grade at the winter temperature; i.e. a 10 grade oil should correspond to a 10W oil. For some applications, such as when the temperature ranges in use are not very wide, single-grade motor oil is satisfactory; for example, lawn mower engines, and vintage or classic cars.</font></p><p> </p><p>To make a 10w-40 oil, the manufacturer would start out with a 10 weight oil as the base stock. All by itself, this oil would thin out so much at normal operating temperatures that the oil film would be useless. So, they add these very special very long molecules, the VIIs. The VII molecules are as much as 1000 times as long as an oil molecule. The VII molecules curl up in a little ball at room temperature, but as the temperature gets higher they uncurl and stretch out, like a cat sleeping in the sunlight. The more stretched out the molecule is, the more it impedes the normal flow of the oil, thus raising the effective viscosity. Now, this sounds just a little too good to be true. Well, there are two catches: first, these molecules are not lubricants, so the more of them that you add the less oil you have sitting around lubricating things. Secondly, these VII molecules can be broken into pieces by various pressures and forces, like being squeezed through the transmission gears in a motorcycle or the hydraulic valves in a diesel engine. Every time a VII molecule gets broken, the oil loses some of its high temperature viscosity. Synthetic oils made from pure PAOs and/or Diesters typically have very few VIIs, so these oils are far less subject to viscosity breakdown due to shearing of the VII package. As a result, synthetics are far more stable in a motorcycle engine. </p>  <p> </p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.james-van-blaricum.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL - Multi-grade</font></a></h1><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">The temperature range the oil is exposed to in most vehicles can be wide, ranging from cold ambient temperatures in the winter before the vehicle is started up to hot operating temperatures when the vehicle is fully warmed up in hot summer weather. A specific oil will have high viscosity when cold and a low viscosity at the engine's operating temperature. The difference in viscosities for any single-grade oil is too large between the extremes of temperature. To bring the difference in viscosities closer together, special polymer additives called viscosity index improvers, or VIs are added to the oil. These additives make the oil a multi-grade motor oil. The idea is to cause the multi-grade oil to have the viscosity of the base number when cold and the viscosity of second number when hot. This enables one type of oil to be generally used all year, and when multi-grades were initially developed, they were frequently described as all-season oil. The viscosity of a multi-grade oil still varies logarithmically with temperature, but the slope representing the change is lessened. This slope representing the change with temperature depends on the nature and amount of the additives to the base oil.</font></p><p> </p><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">The SAE designation for multi-grade oils includes two grade numbers; for example, 10W-30 designates a common multi-grade oil. Historically, the first number associated with the W (again 'W' is for Winter, not Weight) is not rated at any single temperature. The &quot;10W&quot; means that this oil can be pumped by your engine as well as a single-grade SAE 10 oil can be pumped. &quot;5W&quot; can be pumped at a lower temperature than &quot;10W&quot; and &quot;0W&quot; can be pumped at a lower temperature than &quot;5W&quot;. The second number, 30, means that the viscosity of this multi-grade oil at 100&deg;C (212&deg;F) operating temperature corresponds to the viscosity of a single-grade 30 oil at same temperature. The governing SAE standard is called SAE J300. This &quot;classic&quot; method of defining the &quot;W&quot; rating has since been replaced with a more technical test where a &quot;cold crank simulator&quot; is used at increasingly lowered temps. A 0W oil is tested at -35&deg;C, a 5W at -30&deg;C and a 10W is tested at -25&deg;C. The real-world ability of an oil to crank in the cold is diminished soon after put into service. The motor oil grade and viscosity to be used in a given vehicle is specified by the manufacturer of the vehicle (although some modern European cars now make no viscosity requirement), but can vary from country to country when climatic or mpg constraints come into play. Oil circulates through the piston oil rings to cool and lubricate the compression rings. Inside gasoline engines, the top compression ring is exposed to temperatures as high as 320 &deg;F (160 &deg;C).</font></p><h1><a target="_blank" href="http://www.jamesvanblaricum.net/"><font size="5" face="Arial">SIGNAL OIL</font></a></h1><p><font size="3" face="Times New Roman">Many new vehicles are marked to use 5W-20 oil (Honda, Ford, and more recently Toyota) which is not much thinner than a 30 weight oil. Nay-sayers of 20 weight oil's ability to protect engines should note that typically, 30 weight oils shear down into the 20 weight range anyway. Most engine wear is during start-up and warm-up period, where the thinner 20 weight oil's flow is desirable. Overall, lab test results of the wear metals contained in used oil samples show low or lower wear with 20 weight than 30 in applications it is specified for. Some ultra fuel efficient and hybrid vehicles are marked to use 0W-20 oil. For some selective mechanical problems with engines, using a more viscous oil can ameliorate the symptoms, i.e. changing from 5W-20 to 20W-50 may eliminate a knocking noise from the engine but doesn't solve the problem, just &quot;masks&quot; it. Excess amounts of oil consumed by an engine burning it can be addressed by using a thicker oil, a 10W-40 might not burn off as fast compared to a 5W-30. A newer product that also addresses this issue is the &quot;High-Miles&quot; oils now marketed. They tend to be slightly thick for their grades, contain extra additives and seal conditioners. Apparently the formulation of these oils works well in many instances.</font></p><p> </p><p>   </p><p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.net/blog">News regarding Signal Oil serves several purposes</a></p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.net/blog">News regarding Signal Oil acts as a lubricant</a></p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.jim-van-blaricum.org/blog">News regarding Signal Oil has several other important jobs</a> </p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.net/blog">News regarding Signal Oil cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket</a> </p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.jimvanblaricum.org/blog">News regarding Signal Oil common in sport bikes</a> </p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.signal-oil-and-gas.com/blog">News regarding Signal Oil for motorcycle transmissions</a> </p>  <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.signaloilandgas.net/blog">News regarding Signal Oil do a perfect 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</font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.blogspot.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas injection </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://technorati.com/people/technorati/signaloil0"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas interference </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.blog.com/3037331/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas show </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://members.greenpeace.org/blog/signaloil"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas lift </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.last.fm/user/signal-oil/journal/2008/04/22/707506/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas separator </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.aboutus.org/User_talk:Signal-oil"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas lock </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://geocities.com/signal_oil/blog.html"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas sand </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/resumes/signal_oil/signaloilandg"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas migration </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.bebo.com/SignalOilS"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : gas processing plant </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://journals.aol.com/signaloil0/signal-oil/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oilfield </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.familytimes.com/node/view/1011"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-water contact </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.blogs.ie/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Petroleum </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.blogsome.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : vegetable oilsand </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.soulcast.com/post/show/125980/SIGNAL-OIL"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : petrochemical oils </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://requests.wikia.com/wiki/User_talk:Signal-oil"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : volatile essential oils </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/signaloil0"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Mineral oil </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.wordpress.com/2008/04/22/signal-oil/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Organic oils </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.sampasite.com/signal-oil/blog/default.htm"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Fuel </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.tblog.com/post/1969985231"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Heat transport </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.squidoo.com/signal-oil"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Petrochemicals </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.epinions.com/user-signal-oil/show_~View_Profile"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Crude oil </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.vox.com/library/post/signal-oil.html"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Oil Extraction </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://blogs.ign.com/signal-oil/2008/04/22/87509/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Unprocessed petroleum </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://clearblogs.com/signal-oil/105291/SIGNAL+OIL.html"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : hydrocarbons </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://blogs.grab.com/signaloil0/490019"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Oil </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.egoweblog.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Olefins </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.insanejournal.com/345.html"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-prone </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.livejournal.com/642.html"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-mud emulsifier </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.busythumbs.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Synthetic Natural Gas </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.blogr.com/stories/8065605/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Wet Gas </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.blogyx.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Capillaries </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.multiply.com/journal/item/1/SIGNAL_OIL"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Exploratory Well </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.netcipia.net/xwiki/bin/view/XWiki/sym2118392690"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Injection Well </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.opendiary.com/entryview.asp?authorcode=D758009&amp;entry=10001"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : Reserves </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.terapad.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-in-water emulsion </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.tooum.net/switchboard/blog/4436:SIGNAL_OIL/1"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-emulsion mud </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.tumblr.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil-base mud </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.weebly.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil well </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.thoughts.com/signaloil0/blog/signal-oil-89392/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas lease </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.sosblog.com/The-first-blog-b1/SIGNAL-OIL-b1-p1.htm"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas lease </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.zoomshare.com/2.shtml"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil and gas separator </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.blogetery.com/2008/04/22/signal-oil/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil content </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://www.etribes.com/view-profile/61127"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil field </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.ireporter.tv/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil formation volume factor </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil.blogrox.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil kitchen </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signal-oil.blogspirit.com/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil mud </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil.shoutpost.com/24882/signal-oil"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil on cuttings </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://signaloil0.bloggles.info/2008/04/22/signal-oil/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil pool </font></a><br /><a target="blank" href="http://sayanythingblog.com/member/2063/"><font size="5" face="Arial" color="#800080">SIGNAL OIL : oil sand </font></a></h1>]]></content:encoded>
<comments>http://members.greenpeace.org/blog/signaloil?p=6899&amp;c=1&amp;tb=1&amp;pb=1#comments</comments>
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