The Infinity Oil and Gas product you buy starts as a base oil. The base oil makes up about 85% of the oil you buy. Infinity Oil and Gas,, the base oil can be refined from crude oil, chemically (synthetically) manufactured, or a blended combination. Infinity Oil and Gas base oils that are refined from crude oil are colorless and pretty much odorless and are sold to the public as mineral oil. Infinity Oil and Gas The crude infinity oil and gas is a combination of a lot of different chemicals, ranging from light gasoline types of fuels to waxes and tars. When you heat the crude Infinity Oil, the gasoline and diesel oil boil off pretty early. Unfortunately, the mineral oil, paraffin, wax and tar molecules are all hooked up with each other, and it's not so easy to separate them from each other. Infinity Oil and Gas, also, the crude oil contains the aforementioned aromatics, which are quite bad in your oil: they are very reactive, and when oxidized they cause all kinds of problems. Refining oil means trying to remove the bad stuff, while leaving the good stuff. Infinity Oil and Gas the more bad stuff we remove, the better the oil works.
The simplest way to refine oil is to process it with a clay, a material a lot like kitty litter. The clay will soak up much of the aromatics and sulpher and nitrogen compounds. Infinity Oil and Gas, then, you dilute the oil with solvent like MEK (Methyl-Ethyl-Keytone) and/or Toluene (that's the stuff in model airplane glue that's so popular with teenagers), and freeze the oil. The good stuff will mostly stay liquid, and the waxes will solidify and can then be filtered out. This clay-solvent refining process has been around since about 1930.