What kind of Octane do you put in your C-Class?
Question: What happens if I fill up my 2002 C320 wagon with regular? Are there long term effects? Will it affect performance or mileage?
Thanks.
Newbii
With a 35 cent difference between 87 and 91 in SoCal, filling up with premium is about $500/year more expensive.
Newbii
If you buy Hyundai or Kia you save even more. Come on you drive a MB you can afford that $500. Sorry have to give IMHO.
.... PING...
.... PING...
.... PING...
.... PING...
.... PING...

On further thought...I decided to edit content of this post, with consideration to anyone I might have offended... Soonja Kamaswarani and her relatives included.
Last edited by Rick; Jul 22, 2002 at 01:05 PM.
will hurt performance and your engine. Iv'e read where you can have your ECU set by the dealer for your car to accept lower octane gas. I don't know what the performance decrease is. Luckily you have the 3.2 liter engine that has good power to begin with.
Trending Topics
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Best regards,
CP
P.S. You must do quite bit of driving to have a $500 gap for the 35 cent SoCal difference (at my mpg, that would be almost 36,000 annual miles driven).
You bought a car with the MB tri-star, not the Chrysler penta-star. Do the right thing and use the 91 octane gas that the engine was designed to receive.
If ur that cheap, then buy the 99 cent octane booster @ pepboys!!!
Its better then nothing. Having worked @ a gas station I can
tell you all that gas is gas, gas does not come in 89 or 91 octane, the trucker basically adds the chemicals to it!
I have often wondered if its the same buying this octane booster, some people say its not the samething! Try it out, and let us know how it runs on it.
For now, I just get my gas @ costco or sams club. I can't feel ne difference in cheveron, arco or gasahol, which is quite popluar here in the desert!
I don't own a mb yet, but I drive a 300z that takes high octane.
I'm trying to decide on a ml320 or C230k, But I'm afraid of all these complains in quality....
ping pong!
If ur that cheap, then buy the 99 cent octane booster @ pepboys!!!
Its better then nothing. Having worked @ a gas station I can
tell you all that gas is gas, gas does not come in 89 or 91 octane, the trucker basically adds the chemicals to it!
I have often wondered if its the same buying this octane booster, some people say its not the samething! Try it out, and let us know how it runs on it.
For now, I just get my gas @ costco or sams club. I can't feel ne difference in cheveron, arco or gasahol, which is quite popluar here in the desert!
I don't own a mb yet, but I drive a 300z that takes high octane.
I'm trying to decide on a ml320 or C230k, But I'm afraid of all these complains in quality....
I can tell a difference between Shell and Amoco here in Chicago, and Amoco is supposed to be on the same level as Shell. It seems to be a cleaner burning gasoline.
Having worked @ a gas station I can
tell you all that gas is gas, gas does not come in 89 or 91 octane, the trucker basically adds the chemicals to it!
Amoco is supposed to have fewer contaminants. Perhaps that may explain the difference. Just a guess.
The way I understand it, all major gas producers just make two grades. Their lowest, usually 87 octane; and their highest, usually 91, 93, or 94 octane. The pumps actually mix the two types together to make any "in-between" grades.
Your engine management system probably would compensate for the reduced octane. Of course, you would have a concurrent reduction in engine performance.
Fact is that just about every car currently sold in the US has the ability to run on 87. The computer compensates the timing so that the engine will not ping.
As Mark points out, the compensation will result in reduced performance, however.
If MB made cars that pinged and predetonated on 87, or damaged their engines on 87, you'd hear complaints throughout the US. Lots of people are cheap (or don't really care, if for example they are just leasing/renting the car) and use 87 octane.
If MB didn't account for those people, there would be lots of trouble.
That being said, one should always use the octane recommended in the Owner's Manual, no more (waste of money) and no less (the car will run optimally on the octane it was designed for).
Last edited by SoCal240/6; Jul 22, 2002 at 05:59 PM.
its not a good idea at all. Do you see that sticker on the inside of the fuel door, "Premium Fuel Only" thats should answer your question. Plus you would be amazed at how much gas you would save it you put it in winter mode and start in second gear.
ping pong!
If ur that cheap, then buy the 99 cent octane booster @ pepboys!!!
Its better then nothing. Having worked @ a gas station I can
tell you all that gas is gas, gas does not come in 89 or 91 octane, the trucker basically adds the chemicals to it!
There definetly is a difference between brands as some like Chevron add additional additives beyond what the goverment mandates. Personally I would never put ARCO, Shell or no-name brand fuels in my car.
I have never put anything im my car but shell premium fuel i belive its 93 or 94 octance but i actually forgot. I am kinda picky when it comes to gas. Dont ask why but i never had anything but shell premium fuel in my cars.
Pinging is the short term effect....save a few cents at the pump today...and make your service rep a happy guy when he rebuilds your valve train/cam assembly at $94 per hour....oh, and warranty probably wont cover this.
What's the MPG difference between standard driving and winter mode? (24 MPG vs. ???)






