The entire barrel is used and each barrel produces about 19.6 gallons of gasoline. Each barrel contains 42 gallons of crude oil.
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∙ 14y agoAnonymous
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100% The entire 42-gallon barrel of crude oil produces that amount of gasoline.
A barrel of oil is used to store and transport crude oil and petroleum products. It is a standard unit of measurement for the oil industry, with one barrel equaling 42 US gallons or 159 liters. Oil is extracted from the barrel for refining into various products such as gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and heating oil.
Actually, all 42 gallons of crude oil in a barrel is used to produce that amount of gasoline.Each 42-gallon barrel of oil produces about 19.6 gallons of gasoline.
One barrel (42 gallons) of crude oil, when refined, yields approximately 19.6 gallons of finished motor gasoline. The remainder of the barrel yields distillate fuel oil, residual fuel oil, jet fuel, and other products.
Crude oil is distilled to make gasoline.
A oil barrel is a standard unit of volume used to measure crude oil and other petroleum products. It is equivalent to 42 US gallons or about 159 liters. Oil barrels are commonly used in the oil industry for pricing and transportation purposes.
Reforming is the process used to increase the total volume of gasoline that can be produced from a barrel of crude oil. Refining is the process of turning the crude oil into components for other uses.
About 19.6 gallons of gasoline from each barrel of crude oil. According to API: 'Better refining technologies have made it possible to produce over 21 gallons of gasoline from a 42-gallon barrel of crude oil ' also look at the National Petroleum Refiners Association I wish i had my old thinkpad up and running, i know I have a really good graph of all the products that are taken from a '55' gal barrel of oil.. with additaves, it adds up to quite a bit more than the 'barrel' itself..
On average, it takes about 0.48 gallons of crude oil to produce one gallon of gasoline. This includes the oil used in extraction, transportation, refining, and distribution processes.
Gasoline, kerosene, and crude petroleum are related in that they are all derived from the refining of crude oil. Crude petroleum is the raw material that undergoes refining processes to produce gasoline and kerosene, among other products. Gasoline is a lighter fraction of crude oil used as fuel for vehicles, while kerosene is a slightly heavier fraction often used as a fuel for heating and lighting.
Petroleum is a crude oil that is used to produce gasoline.
kerosene is a more refined version of crude petroleum