Farmer Fran
Well-Known Member
Run 93
Sponsored
I wouldn't, I always use either 93 or 94 octane, and drive away from any station that has 91 "Premium". I bought the car knowing full well that it calls for 93 octane or better gas, and I don't want to f-up a high compression engine with lousy gas.Washington state has the 3rd highest average gas prices in the USA, right behind California and Hawaii!….I know, I paid for the GT’s HP, so why not get it all the time, right? How much HP is lost if I used 87 octane? Premium here is 50 to 60 cents more per gallon and it hurts, just a little each fill up, you know?
This is the hard to swallow truth.These cars have 16 gallon tanks. To fill it up completely is only a $16.00 difference from 87 to 93 octane. Just use 93. If an extra $16 every week or two breaks you, you probably bought the wrong car.
93 for meWashington state has the 3rd highest average gas prices in the USA, right behind California and Hawaii!….I know, I paid for the GT’s HP, so why not get it all the time, right? How much HP is lost if I used 87 octane? Premium here is 50 to 60 cents more per gallon and it hurts, just a little each fill up, you know?
and why did you do that????But I put in the $3.50/ gallon rip off gas instead of the $2.70 freedom gas.
It's new I don't want to risk anything for the first 500 miles. It's not my commuter car anyway.and why did you do that????
It basically come down to this- If you can’t afford an extra $10-$15 a tank you bought the wrong car and can’t afford it plain and simple.Washington state has the 3rd highest average gas prices in the USA, right behind California and Hawaii!….I know, I paid for the GT’s HP, so why not get it all the time, right? How much HP is lost if I used 87 octane? Premium here is 50 to 60 cents more per gallon and it hurts, just a little each fill up, you know?
Not many places out west have 93 unfortunately.I still can’t understand why people would ever put crap gas in a high performance engine.
Why did you buy a sports car for a lot of money if you can’t afford a few dollars per fill up.
There’s a couple golden rules when it comes to Coyote imo.
-Keep your air filter clean
-Use full synthetic oil, and don’t wait 10k miles to change it. More like 5k most.
-use 93 octane gas from good stations
- step on the gas and stop diving like a granny!
You must not travel much. I rarely encounter any stations with other than 91 octane. To get 93 or higher, I would have to go to the track 35 miles away. I have an ATV that calls for 93 octane ethanol free. The only station that had it, now only had 91E10. I finally found a station with 91E0, So far, it runs OK in my ATV, and I don't really expect any long term issues..I wouldn't, I always use either 93 or 94 octane, and drive away from any station that has 91 "Premium". I bought the car knowing full well that it calls for 93 octane or better gas, and I don't want to f-up a high compression engine with lousy gas.
It's just not worth taking the risk...