is there really anything wrong with putting regular unleaded in a premium unleaded car?

FAS284

Senior member
Jan 25, 2002
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mechanics I've talked to say it would just affect long-term reliability but is there really anything wrong with putting 87 instead of 91 or above octane in say, a BMW or lexus?
 

Kalvin00

Lifer
Jan 11, 2003
12,705
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yes.

this will cause detonation (fuel ignites in combustion chamber spontaneously), and will eventually burn a hole in the top of your pistons.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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Originally posted by: Kalvin00
yes.

this will cause detonation (fuel ignites in combustion chamber spontaneously), and will eventually burn a hole in the top of your pistons.

Pings, early death of car (really early). Happened to my friends prelude (it was a girl) :roll:
 

DivideBYZero

Lifer
May 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: Kalvin00
yes.

this will cause detonation (fuel ignites in combustion chamber spontaneously), and will eventually burn a hole in the top of your pistons.

ANSWER.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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I personally wouldn't do it to an investment like a lexus or bmw. But, it is your car.
 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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If the car is modern, the ECU will compensate and it will not affect long term reliability.

If the car is pure engine, you will destroy your engine very, very quickly.
 

DivideBYZero

Lifer
May 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: Eli
If the car is modern, the ECU will compensate and it will not affect long term reliability.

If the car is pure engine, you will destroy your engine very, very quickly.

Not always true. Maps can only compensate so far in high performance setups.

Only cars like the M3 with it's per cylinder knock sensors and 25MIPS ECU can really cope with wide variance in fule grades. Most create an average for the fuel grade used over time.
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: Eli
If the car is modern, the ECU will compensate and it will not affect long term reliability.

If the car is pure engine, you will destroy your engine very, very quickly.

Except if the car has forced induction, and then no modern ECU can prevent all detonation, and so reliability is still threatened.

I don't understand why people put regular in their premium-only cars when gas prices go up. Relatively speaking, premium becomes a better buy, not a worse one, when prices go up, because the spread in price remains roughly constant.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: Eli
If the car is modern, the ECU will compensate and it will not affect long term reliability.

If the car is pure engine, you will destroy your engine very, very quickly.

Except if the car has forced induction, and then no modern ECU can prevent all detonation, and so reliability is still threatened.

I don't understand why people put regular in their premium-only cars when gas prices go up. Relatively speaking, premium becomes a better buy, not a worse one, when prices go up, because the spread in price remains roughly constant.

Because they paid $10-20k more for a car and can't spare 10 extra cents per gallon........:roll:


Edit: sarcasm btw
 

Ronstang

Lifer
Jul 8, 2000
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Originally posted by: Kalvin00
yes.

this will cause detonation (fuel ignites in combustion chamber spontaneously), and will eventually burn a hole in the top of your pistons.

That may have been true 40 years ago but today there are conditionals that must be considerred to make such a blanket statement. If you are driving an old high compression vehicle with a carburetor and no electronic controls then running a lower octane fuel can definitely lead to detonation and damage the engine.

Now this simply is NOT true for most computer controlled cars with fuel injection because almost all have knock sensors that monitor detonation and retard the timing enough to prevent it. You do lose power when this happens but you are not going to damage the engine. You can also lose gas mileage. I tested my Taurus SHO with both regular and premium. With premium it had more power and got better mileage....enough so that by my calculations it was only costing me about $.05 extra to use the premium and the car performed better so it was worth it to me. My friend tested this on his car and he claimed his car required premium but ran fine and got better mileage on regular. Each car can be different and testing is required. If you hear audible "pinging" then you ARE damaging your engine.

My father drove the SHO the first 105K miles of it's life putting only regular gas in it even though it required premium from the manufacturer. I only put regular in it until during the summer months I started getting some "pinging" during shifting and then started using premium. After the testing I decided to only use premium. The car now has 220K miles on it and runs fine and has never had any engine work needed all the while running regular for far more than half those miles. You take from this what you want as I am just throwing it out there as a real world example.

 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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Even after all that, why would you WANT to put regular in a car that recommends premium.
 

Ronstang

Lifer
Jul 8, 2000
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Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Even after all that, why would you WANT to put regular in a car that recommends premium.


If it saves you money and you don't take a hit on gas mileage and you don't drive the car to it's performance limits anyway it can definitely make sense. In my example it only cost me an extra $.05 a gallon or $.80 a tankful to enjoy the full performance of my vehicle so it was not a big deal. It will definitley be car and person dependent so testing is in order. For a time I ran regular in the colder months and premium in the warmer months because as the mileage on the car rose the extra carbon deposits on the pistons made the car detonate to a degree at times and it became outside the range the ECU could compensate for. Newer cars should be more tolerant. Each case will be different and you should determine for yourself what is best.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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So your telling me it is beneficial to save 10 cents a gallon when you were able to afford buying a car that requires premium octane?
 

DivideBYZero

Lifer
May 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: AMDUALY
So your telling me it is beneficial to save 10 cents a gallon when you were able to afford buying a car that requires premium octane?

No one said that. We said the opposite.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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Originally posted by: Ronstang
Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Even after all that, why would you WANT to put regular in a car that recommends premium.


If it saves you money and you don't take a hit on gas mileage and you don't drive the car to it's performance limits anyway it can definitely make sense.
In my example it only cost me an extra $.05 a gallon or $.80 a tankful to enjoy the full performance of my vehicle so it was not a big deal. It will definitley be car and person dependent so testing is in order. For a time I ran regular in the colder months and premium in the warmer months because as the mileage on the car rose the extra carbon deposits on the pistons made the car detonate to a degree at times and it became outside the range the ECU could compensate for. Newer cars should be more tolerant. Each case will be different and you should determine for yourself what is best.

 

DivideBYZero

Lifer
May 18, 2001
24,117
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Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Originally posted by: Ronstang
Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Even after all that, why would you WANT to put regular in a car that recommends premium.


If it saves you money and you don't take a hit on gas mileage and you don't drive the car to it's performance limits anyway it can definitely make sense.
In my example it only cost me an extra $.05 a gallon or $.80 a tankful to enjoy the full performance of my vehicle so it was not a big deal. It will definitley be car and person dependent so testing is in order. For a time I ran regular in the colder months and premium in the warmer months because as the mileage on the car rose the extra carbon deposits on the pistons made the car detonate to a degree at times and it became outside the range the ECU could compensate for. Newer cars should be more tolerant. Each case will be different and you should determine for yourself what is best.

Selective reading FTL.
 

NaOH

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2006
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Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Originally posted by: Ronstang
Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Even after all that, why would you WANT to put regular in a car that recommends premium.


If it saves you money and you don't take a hit on gas mileage and you don't drive the car to it's performance limits anyway it can definitely make sense.
In my example it only cost me an extra $.05 a gallon or $.80 a tankful to enjoy the full performance of my vehicle so it was not a big deal. It will definitley be car and person dependent so testing is in order. For a time I ran regular in the colder months and premium in the warmer months because as the mileage on the car rose the extra carbon deposits on the pistons made the car detonate to a degree at times and it became outside the range the ECU could compensate for. Newer cars should be more tolerant. Each case will be different and you should determine for yourself what is best.

Selective reading FTL.

I did read that. But my point is, it isn't even significantly more expensive either way. If your car was designed to run premium then why run your car with regular? There are tons of other areas to save money in. You don't know how much the long run costs will be.

 

torpid

Lifer
Sep 14, 2003
11,631
11
76
With modern cars, it's generally fine. My dealer has on occasion even recommended putting in the cheaper stuff due to additives that many gas cos put in for winter conditions.

The only real problem is that it reduces your performance a bit. I don't imagine it's really an economical advantage to pump the cheaper stuff, but it certainly is not harmful to most modern cars.
 

Ronstang

Lifer
Jul 8, 2000
12,493
18
81
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
5.0L mustangs and my 5.0L Crown Vic don't have knock sensors.

:(


No they don't but their compression is low enough that with proper tuning you can make them run on the cheaper gas if you don't go around racing all the time. If you have put on aftermarket aluminum heads it is even easier.