Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?

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Macro
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by Macro » 04/07/23, 20:28

the kero itself... It does not only send co2 and h2o... It is particularly suffering
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by Christophe » 04/07/23, 20:38

Here :)

So aviation limits the greenhouse effect!

We have known this since September 11! : Mrgreen:
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by sicetaitsimple » 04/07/23, 20:48

Macro wrote:the kero itself... It does not only send co2 and h2o... It is particularly suffering


Are you sure? I'm surprised....How much sulphur?
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by GuyGadeboisTheBack » 04/07/23, 20:55

sicetaitsimple wrote:
Macro wrote:the kero itself... It does not only send co2 and h2o... It is particularly suffering


Are you sure? I'm surprised....How much sulphur?

Derived from petroleum refining, kerosene results from the withdrawal during distillation of a cut with an initial distillation point (IP) between 150 and 180°C, and an end distillation point (FP) between 225 and 250°C . It should be sulfur free.

Kerosene is mainly used in the manufacture of fuels for aviation (turbojets and turboprops). It is the main component of automotive additives (injector cleaning, etc.).

Once hydrotreated, kerosenes are used for a wide variety of specialty applications.
https://totalenergies.ch/fr/nos-produit ... s/kerosene

Heating oil, on the other hand, contains about 0,3% sulfur by mass.
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by Macro » 04/07/23, 22:46

In France, kerosene contains more sulfur than diesel. In fact, during the delivery phases by pipeline, the diesel-kerosene mixture which is taken is always reinjected in the following cycle into the domestic fuel oil, otherwise it would raise the sulfur levels in the diesel fuel which would no longer be compliant, whereas it rather lowers the sulfur level in heating oil I'm not in my job for the week but I should be able to find you the standards in force
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by out » 05/07/23, 08:13

Too bad the photo doesn't show where the plane went next.
The most likely is that, if you had followed the plane, you would have seen that it is in a holding pattern (nicknamed "racetrack" among pilots and air traffic controllers), for example to wait for the landing slot .
Contrails are persistent when the atmosphere is moist, for example, ahead of a disturbance. They often announce an approaching rainy disturbance. They are not the cause, but the consequence.
The ice crystals of the contrails are the condensation of water vapor from the atmosphere, not from the engines. So not sensitive to the composition of kerosene.
No one has ever been able to provide any valid evidence of a chemical additive in contrails. Maybe it's just that chemtrails don't exist.
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by out » 28/07/23, 13:59

The difference is... chemtrails don't exist.
Contrails are persistent, possibly several hours, when the surrounding air is humid.
The difference does not come from the content, but from the aerological conditions of the air mass
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by gegyx » 02/04/24, 16:56

when you read it, we immediately feel something solid... : roll:

The filaments with a strange, unnatural composition come from out or ?

https://www.analytika.fr/investigations ... eroportes/
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by izentrop » 02/04/24, 18:49

gegyx wrote:when you read it, we immediately feel something solid... : roll:

The filaments with a strange, unnatural composition come from out or ?

https://www.analytika.fr/investigations ... eroportes/
They call themselves scientists but are more on the comploplo side at analytica : Mrgreen:
They're just "sons of the virgin", everything that's most natural
A “normal” aerial dispersion, according to arachnologist Anne Bounias-Delacour, and which concerns all spiders: “When babies are born, they do not stay with their mother. Everyone goes to live on their own, so as not to compete on food, for example. Spiders climb onto a shrub, wait for an upward draft and let themselves be carried away. »

The silk thread that they secrete, called “Virgo thread”, allows them to be carried more easily by the wind and also serves as a “safety thread, to cling to a branch if they do not want to go too far. far away for example”. Indeed, with this swarming technique, spiders can cover very variable distances, ranging from a few meters to a few kilometers!
https://www.ouest-france.fr/leditiondus ... 0L%27Union.
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Re: Chemtrails and contrails, what's the difference?




by GuyGadeboisTheBack » 02/04/24, 19:07

izentrop wrote:
gegyx wrote:when you read it, we immediately feel something solid... : roll:

The filaments with a strange, unnatural composition come from out or ?

https://www.analytika.fr/investigations ... eroportes/
They call themselves scientists but are more on the comploplo side at analytica : Mrgreen:
They're just "sons of the virgin", everything that's most natural
A “normal” aerial dispersion, according to arachnologist Anne Bounias-Delacour, and which concerns all spiders: “When babies are born, they do not stay with their mother. Everyone goes to live on their own, so as not to compete on food, for example. Spiders climb onto a shrub, wait for an upward draft and let themselves be carried away. »

The silk thread that they secrete, called “Virgo thread”, allows them to be carried more easily by the wind and also serves as a “safety thread, to cling to a branch if they do not want to go too far. far away for example”. Indeed, with this swarming technique, spiders can cover very variable distances, ranging from a few meters to a few kilometers!
https://www.ouest-france.fr/leditiondus ... 0L%27Union.

They are perhaps (more than perhaps, even) "sons of the virgin", but Bernard Tailliez is not an incompetent clown...
https://www.geo.fr/sciences/potrait-ber ... lui-174386
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