Unleaded 95 or 98?
I run 93 in mine, and if i remember correctly the minimum is 91. So you should be fine either way. There are a few good threads about octane ratings here on the forum. Here is one suggesting that higher octane may give you better performance (at least in the MPG category).....
https://www.crossfireforum.org/forum...91-octane.html
Do a search on octane rating or ethanol and you should find some useful information.
https://www.crossfireforum.org/forum...91-octane.html
Do a search on octane rating or ethanol and you should find some useful information.
I run 93 in mine, and if i remember correctly the minimum is 91. So you should be fine either way. There are a few good threads about octane ratings here on the forum. Here is one suggesting that higher octane may give you better performance (at least in the MPG category).....
https://www.crossfireforum.org/forum...91-octane.html
Do a search on octane rating or ethanol and you should find some useful information.
https://www.crossfireforum.org/forum...91-octane.html
Do a search on octane rating or ethanol and you should find some useful information.
Yeah, here in CT, standard pump grades are 87 / 89 / 93 with 10% ethanol. I don't think I've ever seen 95 octane advertised.
Also, the engine spec calls for 91 octane. Not sure there is any benefit to 93 let alone 95. Maybe with higher boost and/or advanced spark.
Also, the engine spec calls for 91 octane. Not sure there is any benefit to 93 let alone 95. Maybe with higher boost and/or advanced spark.
Spain: 95 RON "Euro" is sold in every station with 98 RON "Super" being offered in most stations. Many stations around cities and highways offer other high-octane "premium" brands.
Are European cars running higher compression ratios than the U.S.? What's the benefit of the higher octane blends given that octane yields less energy per given volume than heptane? Emissions?
From the BP website....
attached image
Also interesting what they add about ethanol, since it contains the OH group (being an alcohol) it provides oxygen through this OH group....
"......This is BP Unleaded 91 with up to 10% ethanol. Because ethanol has a higher octane the addition of ethanol increases the octane to 94 typically so potentially there are economy and power benefits. However because the ethanol contains oxygen there can be up to 3% reduction in fuel economy to offset the power....."
I'm not sure the OH group really adds to the thermodynamics - since it will ultimately sop up H atoms to form H2O in the end (exhaust).
What I'm trying to say is....the fact that it "adds oxygen" is possibly a misnomer, since it adds OH, but this doesnt participate in breaking C-H's and making C-O&C-O2 where your main hp (enthalpy) gains are made.
I run Ultimate or Shell's equivalent V-Power in my cars - interesting read though.
attached image
Also interesting what they add about ethanol, since it contains the OH group (being an alcohol) it provides oxygen through this OH group....
"......This is BP Unleaded 91 with up to 10% ethanol. Because ethanol has a higher octane the addition of ethanol increases the octane to 94 typically so potentially there are economy and power benefits. However because the ethanol contains oxygen there can be up to 3% reduction in fuel economy to offset the power....."
I'm not sure the OH group really adds to the thermodynamics - since it will ultimately sop up H atoms to form H2O in the end (exhaust).
What I'm trying to say is....the fact that it "adds oxygen" is possibly a misnomer, since it adds OH, but this doesnt participate in breaking C-H's and making C-O&C-O2 where your main hp (enthalpy) gains are made.
I run Ultimate or Shell's equivalent V-Power in my cars - interesting read though.
Last edited by Billy22Bob; Jul 3, 2012 at 02:36 PM.
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