The fuel oil burned for a long time, but it was hot and warm. The kerosene burned very brightly at a moderate speed. the gasoline burned very well. the gas burned with a blue and very hot flame.
Once, when transporting underground oil under the scorching sun, the oil separated due to the heat into a black viscous liquid, a yellowish oily liquid, a slightly darkish transparent liquid and an odorous gas. we tried to ignite each of these components. we called them fuel oil, kerosene, gasoline and gas respectively.
The man whos name is Torbo Prap Enghin pantented his invention. However, you can buy oil drill.
one philosopher suggested that if we divide something into two again and again, then in the end we will get an absolutely indivisible particle, we called it ve'den (translated from our language this means <<primordial>>). we are trying to create the most powerful microscope possible to see this particle. this will cost 10V (thats our currency) and will end up showing small, grey, and very blurry orbs.
He discovered that air, was fuel too. This was the invention of the TURBOPROP ENGINE.
The shorter the arrow the less effort. So the fire could turn the shaft easily with little effort, but the shaft would turn the prop easily with little effort, and the prop would push the air with little effort. But they all would have large forces on what they turned or pushed. He noticed that When this happened the propeller spinned fast, even with a flame with low force. He also noticed that the propeller was like an air pump, feeding air fast to the fire.
He decided to make the tube have one small hole and one large. The fire would flow out of the small one, because the small one gave the fire velocity. he also attached a Boreal Wood propeller to the front. The shaft would be inside of the tube with smaller lifting surfaces on it. He called it the "Turbine". The fire would turn the shaft, which would turn the propeller. This meant that the force would be FIRE -> SHAFT --> PROPELLER ---> AIR
Later in his workshop, he bought a titanium cylindrical tube with a hole in the front and back. He wanted to see if the fire could propel the tube. So he welded an oil line to the tube. As the oil flowed out and was about to fall out the tube, he ignited it with a match. The fire was propelling itself out of the tube but the tube wasn't being propelled. He noticed that the more space the fire had to burn, the less velocity it had.
Chefs and cooks noticed that using the oil for the fire made the fire burn fast and was pretty smoky. A man watching his chefs cooked noticed that the more oil they poured into the fire, the fast it burner, the hotter, and larger it was. The flame also moved around more quickly. He concluded that adding this oil might have gave the fire velocity, but not the pan over the fire.
It was a new invention: THE OIL DRILL.