Just had a chance to read through that and boy was it informative. Learn sumthin' new everyday! :thumbsup:
Is an extra $2 a fill up for a $40 tank really a deal breaker?
Found my manual, it says 91 octane is recommended for my car. However, i can only find 89 or 92... wtf... where can i get 91? Would it make a difference to put in 92? Should I run 89? 0.o
Found my manual, it says 91 octane is recommended for my car. However, i can only find 89 or 92... wtf... where can i get 91? Would it make a difference to put in 92? Should I run 89? 0.o
You'll be fine. My car recommends 91, but about 1 out of 15 gas stations actually sells 91, it's usually 93 and that's what I use.
Should have specified. It wasn't necessarily the price that made it annoying. It was the availability. I travel quite a bit in rural Iowa. Diesel and E85 are much easier to come by than premium in a lot of the state.
Found my manual, it says 91 octane is recommended for my car. However, i can only find 89 or 92... wtf... where can i get 91? Would it make a difference to put in 92? Should I run 89? 0.o
The Aurion V6 in Australia (Camry in North America) with Toyota spec get an additional 5 hp when use 92 or greater instead of the regular 87.
Yes fuel does make a different in performance, specially if it is indicated by the manufacture.
We're talking 20 cents a gallon x (~ 15 gallons) = $3.00
So, you were so tight that one gallon would have stranded you?
This thread.... it's just FULL of fail.
93 must be better than 91 and 89! It's a higher number, so it has to be better for my vehicle!
Seriously?
If your car calls for 5W20, do you put in 10W40 because the higher number must be better?
If your car calls for a specific gap spark plug, do you knock it open wider because bigger must be better?
Seriously..... same sort of people who buy one product over another just because it costs 15% more.
Read your freaking manual people, and understand WHY they want you to use a specific octane.
Now I'm going to go put Antifreeze in my car. I think I'll put the concentrate in without adding water. After all.... it's concentrated, right? That's better!
Kudos to Paperlantern for actually learning the difference.
No... did you read this thread?
It may give you a slight horsepower boost (2-5 perhaps) and fuel economy boost, but cost wise may be less mileage/dollar spent.
Truth! ^
LOL NO. Read what octane is and why specific engines call for it. Using too much octane can REDUCE power output due to slow/uneven fuel burn and incomplete combustion.
The rest of this thread just makes me lol overall.
This is why i was concerned with putting in 92 where the manual calls for 91. I did try putting 89 in it because i WAS concerned with putting higher octane than called for, and at least havent seen any difference power or behavior wise yet, but ive only ran about a quarter of a tank of it so far. Should I just say fuck it and go back to 87? Ive ran 87 for 6 years in it and the car has never been anything but smooth, I was just wanting to learn about this in case it would actually give me better mileage or performance.
It'll be fine with 92.
This is why i was concerned with putting in 92 where the manual calls for 91. I did try putting 89 in it because i WAS concerned with putting higher octane than called for, and at least havent seen any difference power or behavior wise yet, but ive only ran about a quarter of a tank of it so far. Should I just say fuck it and go back to 87? Ive ran 87 for 6 years in it and the car has never been anything but smooth, I was just wanting to learn about this in case it would actually give me better mileage or performance.
However, I will disagree that you can't damage by going too high on octane. I've learned to never say never. I saw a few local import drivers insist they felt the power gains by running 100 race fuel over the recommended 87 octane. Only later did they realize they destroyed their engines due to incomplete combustion and fuel wash down.You won't damage an engine by running higher octane than rated. Modern engines are pretty smart, but with older engines bad things could happen by pushing an engine with octane that's too low.
However, I will disagree that you can't damage by going too high on octane. I've learned to never say never. I saw a few local import drivers insist they felt the power gains by running 100 race fuel over the recommended 87 octane. Only later did they realize they destroyed their engines due to incomplete combustion and fuel wash down.
the bores and the piston skirts that take the beating worst but it really depends on the metallurgy. if it was bad you would see vastly accelerated wear on everything and some vertical scoring in the bores. the ring lands will take a beating as well and you might see some dishing on the top surface of the compression rings if it ran that way a long time.
Basically lost a lot of the sealing power of the rings due to fuel washing off the oil on the walls, thus causing it to be polished.
They still sell 100 unleaded around here. There was excessive wall scoring which is a tell tale sign of wash down.
