Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: fyleow
Originally posted by: Wheatmaster
Originally posted by: fyleow
Originally posted by: Crappopotamus
ive been filling the max with regular gas for its whole life. i heard that you should fill it with premium, or it will knock, and permanently damage the engine and or trigger the knock sensor, which will make the engine automatically scale down. oh well. :|
and if higher octane fuel is less powerful, why do people fill up with premium before hitting the racetrack?
Read the thread, high performance engines need high octane fuel or they will knock.
so most sedans like honda accord and ford taurus don't need premium fuel? why the heck do people buy it then?
It's all about the compression ratios. If your car manual says to use regular unleaded then just use that and don't worry about it.
This is what I was told in college...
The reason people use higher octane fuel before "hitting the racetrack" is because higher octane fuel allows you to run more spark advance, which will make more power. With computer controlled distributorless ignitions, the change is automatic... the computer advances the spark until it detects pinging via the knock sensor, then it retards timing till it goes away, then it advances till it appears again, etc. etc. With old distributor ignitions, people will fill up with high octane fuel, then turn the distributor to give it a few more degrees of advance.
Just to clear it up, an engine's ECU will only advance the timing like that if it was specifically programmed to. Your Camry and Accord doesen't do that(stock). It has a set range.
Actually...
Hmmmmmm....... After I re-read what I said, I figured it actually wouldnt clear anything up ... lol
I didn't find in there where it said that it will advance the timing all the way until knocking occours.. I mean, heh... I guess it implies it, but it also talks about the spark advance curve beforehand, so that also implies a set range..
There is a set range. The ECU might adjust the curve, but it will not go beyond the extremes of the curve.. unless programmed to?
An engine designed to run 87 octane with a spark advance curve that was designed for 87 octane at peak power output.. isn't going to advance the timing beyond that point and produce more horsepower than it was rated for, do you know what I mean? heh...
That is interesting, though. In theory, running Plus or Premium in a car with electronically controlled spark advance.. could modify the ECUs spark advance curve, compared to regular unleaded.. and therefor change the power curve of the engine... hmm.
I think we're just thinking on 2 different lines here. I know it will advance it until the point of knocking, but only within that specific map. If the engine was designed to run on 87 octane, the map will be designed for 87 octane. Putting Premium in the car isn't going to change the maximum spark advance the engine will see. I guess that's what I'm trying to say.. lol