Re: Duke question??
Charlie-----
Keep in mind that synthetic motor oil is made from "something". That "something" is not gasses taken out of the air, an agricultural product, or a material extracted from seawater. That "something" is petroleum, the same stuff that conventional motor oil is manufactured from.
However, in the process to manufacture synthetic oil the petroleum is broken down into more basic, "smaller" hydrocarbon molecules and, then, "built back up" into the synthetic base stock. The "feedstock" for the whole process could probably be a whole host of hydrocarbon materials, from crude oil to used engine oil to liquified petroleum gas.
In this case, I expect that the waste engine oil is used as the feedstock or ONE OF the feedstocks for the process to manufacture the synthetic oil. Such as it is, when the process is complete I don't think there would be any difference between a synthetic oil manufactured from used engine oil or a synthetic manufactured from crude oil.
This is NOT the same thing as conventional motor oil manufactured from waste engine oil. In that case, the oil is simply re-refined and/or "cleaned up". At least until fairly recently, if not right to the present, most used engine oil is used as a fuel for refineries and is not re-refined into motor oil.
Charlie-----
Keep in mind that synthetic motor oil is made from "something". That "something" is not gasses taken out of the air, an agricultural product, or a material extracted from seawater. That "something" is petroleum, the same stuff that conventional motor oil is manufactured from.
However, in the process to manufacture synthetic oil the petroleum is broken down into more basic, "smaller" hydrocarbon molecules and, then, "built back up" into the synthetic base stock. The "feedstock" for the whole process could probably be a whole host of hydrocarbon materials, from crude oil to used engine oil to liquified petroleum gas.
In this case, I expect that the waste engine oil is used as the feedstock or ONE OF the feedstocks for the process to manufacture the synthetic oil. Such as it is, when the process is complete I don't think there would be any difference between a synthetic oil manufactured from used engine oil or a synthetic manufactured from crude oil.
This is NOT the same thing as conventional motor oil manufactured from waste engine oil. In that case, the oil is simply re-refined and/or "cleaned up". At least until fairly recently, if not right to the present, most used engine oil is used as a fuel for refineries and is not re-refined into motor oil.
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