robvas
Well-Known Member
Those will turn your plugs, O2's and cats all orange with depositsIf you don't have the octane requirement in your place of residence then octane boost additives are always a better alternative approach....
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Those will turn your plugs, O2's and cats all orange with depositsIf you don't have the octane requirement in your place of residence then octane boost additives are always a better alternative approach....
Well since I don't need this then using pump gas at 93 octane or better is my preferred option.Those will turn your plugs, O2's and cats all orange with deposits
We have actually national gas station company called EuroOil, which provides on some station 98 premium plus with only 0.2% Ethanol. There are apps for many petrol stations where nowadays you can check parameters of the fuel online.If some of you guys use 87 in your car, than RON95 which is equivalent to your 91 is totally safe.
The only reason why I use RON98 instead of 95 is because it has 5% less ethanol.
This guy knows what he's talking about ^^^Yes the 5.0 has high compression, but it is cylinder pressure and hot spots in the combustion chamber that cause "pinging" or pre-detonation of the fuel that can cause bad things such as bent rods and hammered bearings.
The car has microphones in the block, more commonly known as knock sensors that when a "ping" is detected because of low octane gas ( octane is not a measurement of power, it is a measurement of resistance to pre-detonation/pinging) will retard the timing so that there is no pinging, but when you retard timing you take power out of the engine ( Engine Masters on MT has a great episode about timing and power)
Some people say to add a couple of gallons of E85, I am not a fan of that as the car does not have a sensor that changes the tune to compensate for E85 having less BTU's per gallon than gasoline, but hey it's your car go for it.
Some people just suck it up and pay for the higher octane so the car will tune itself for maximum power.
Some people will mix the gas at the pump, putting in 5 gallons or 87 octane to every 5 gallons of 93 giving them an in between octane rating that will keep the knock sensors happy.
But if you are not mashing the gas and driving somewhat normally you probably won't even notice the reduction in HP but you will save yourself 15 bucks every time you fuel up.
Where my car does not get a lot of use, I am using ethanol free 93 octane gas in it, which costs about the same as premium fuel, so I feel your pain as far as burning $5 dollar bills when I fill it up.
89 "mid-grade" is also very common in the western US.Our tiers are 87, 91, 93. Some specialty stations have higher race gas ratings but obviously it's the same as European fuels just calculated differently. I'd imagine some sort of metric vs imperial calculation.
Almost all our fuel is 10% corn juice.
That's just listing the Horsepower rating with 93 octane. Sure you may lose 10hp with 87 but for regular driving who cares?Right off the Ford website... https://www.ford.ca/cars/mustang/models/dark-horse/
I think you all need to rethink your strategy around using bad gas for a high compression engine...
If you don't have the octane requirement in your place of residence then octane boost additives are always a better alternative approach....
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Can you please show me what I missed on this picture?Right off the Ford website... https://www.ford.ca/cars/mustang/models/dark-horse/
I think you all need to rethink your strategy around using bad gas for a high compression engine...
If you don't have the octane requirement in your place of residence then octane boost additives are always a better alternative approach....
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LOL, really? It's pretty self explanatory... And my statement still stands... why buy a muscle car with 12-1 compression and cheap out on the gas? If you can't afford the correct gas then IMHO there's a problem which is what the OP was posting about at the beginning of this thread.Can you please show me what I missed on this picture?
What do you want to say with this?
Ok up to you...That's just listing the Horsepower rating with 93 octane. Sure you may lose 10hp with 87 but for regular driving who cares?
The picture just shows how much power every trim makes. Nothing about fuel.LOL, really? It's pretty self explanatory... And my statement still stands... why buy a muscle car with 12-1 compression and cheap out on the gas? If you can't afford the correct gas then IMHO there's a problem which is what the OP was posting about at the beginning of this thread.
I'd venture it's a lot more than 10HP. A previous poster speculated it could be as much as 40HP. We'll never know without some dyno numbers. But for the extra $15 bucks a tank, I'll take the power increase every time.That's just listing the Horsepower rating with 93 octane. Sure you may lose 10hp with 87 but for regular driving who cares?
Almost like it was designed to run on 87... imagine that!I run 93 in my 2024 but with my 2015 GT I only ran 87 and for the 9 years I've had it never once had an engine issue at all.