I'm starting my experiment today, burning 93 Octane instead of 87 Octane in all 3 of my 80's MOPAR 318 motors. Anyone have any predictions on mileage or performance?
I am up here in Canada and remember it was Shell pushing the Nitrogen enriched fuel, an old/older guy at work brought in a pamphlet from Shell and was bragging how he was getting the best fuel for his yota truck. I dont see how an inert gas cleans a fuel system. Havent seen that stupid commercial or talk about it in the last couple yearscrazzywolfie said:but up here in Canada pretty much every shell gas station offers ethanol free 91 unless it states otherwise on the pump. i don't think there is a nitrogen additive. i would think just running without the ethanol would help the engine burn cleaner.
Modern fuel injected engines are constantly adjusting the timing, and retard it as soon as knock is detected. Premium fuel reduces knocking which allows for more advance. I've found regular gas to be low quality and possibly even lower octane than advertised with sometimes 10% alcohol added which decreases power and mileage, whereas premium is a higher quality fuel without the alcohol as well as higher octane. Ive found most vehicles run better with premium fuel and improves mileage too.SuperBurban said:Maybe if you changed your timing, to take advantage of the increased octane, you might see a tiny difference. But without any changes, different octane will not change a thing.
I used to laugh, no matter what car she had, my Mother in law, always claimed that it needed premium, or would not run right.
So how does Dodge detect knocking? chebys have a knock detector mounted low on the engine, but Dodge either uses something else, or uses a much less aggressive timing curve.OldGreyRamcharger said:Modern fuel injected engines are constantly adjusting the timing, and retard it as soon as knock is detected. Premium fuel reduces knocking which allows for more advance. I've found regular gas to be low quality and possibly even lower octane than advertised with sometimes 10% alcohol added which decreases power and mileage, whereas premium is a higher quality fuel without the alcohol as well as higher octane. Ive found most vehicles run better with premium fuel and improves mileage too.
One of the things I miss, from growing up 15 minutes away from Charlotte Motor Speedway - racing gas!stealthbowl said:a real test is buy some 100 or 105 octane. we can get this stuff at our pumps out here idk if you can but anyways try it and bump the timing thats how you will get some mpg and some power.my 93 f150 was stock at 10 btdc and on pump junk i could run 13 btdc and with 100 or 105 i could get 16 btdc. so to stay on track with the post fill it full with 93 and bump the timing till u get ping then back 1 degree
higher octane by my understanding requires more heat to ignite, and burns quicker than lower octane fuel at a slightly higher temp,KThaxton said:Explain how all of that will happen Mike! I predict only an emptier wallet.
Then where would that heat come from? Does the engine detect higher octane gas and decide to turn up it's own heat?Mike Barf said:higher octane by my understanding requires more heat to ignite,
Avgas is usually mixed a few gallons to a full tank of pump gas for a mild street engine. It's about 100-110 Octane (Straight) depending on the type you get. Pretty much all the high octane stuff like 130 has been phased out and replaced with 100LL.The War Wagon said:One of the things I miss, from growing up 15 minutes away from Charlotte Motor Speedway - racing gas!
Starvin' Marvin near UNCC on U.S. 29 used to have "TurboBlue - 109.5 octane."Of course, it also had lead, but it ran great in my old '68 Mercury Monterey, with a 390 SuperMaruader. You could also get 110 Octane leaded at the little mom 'n' pop Union 76 stations around Mooresville, as the dragstrip was there off Rt.150.
I haven't seen a racing gas pump at ANY station, since at least 1990 though.Maybe add a QUART of avgas to a full tank? That stuff is powerful though - somebody who KNOWS something better weigh in on THAT; I just know it's around 170 octane, and will MELT your engine in under 5 minutes if run straight!
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