Ok- I get that all cyclohexanes can technically interconvert by a ring flip but why can't cis-1,2 dimethylcyclohexane be separated because it rapidly interconverts? It technically is chiral, has a mirror imagine (enantiomeric), but you can't seem to separate it because it rapidly interconverts... Is this the only molecule in basic organic chemistry that is capable of this? Keep in mind I'm only in organic chemistry 1