Will 91 octane hurt my engine?
Use the best gas you can find and don’t stress over it. I think using a good Top Tier detergent gasoline is much more important than scouring the planet for 93 non-ethanol gas.




Good question. Direct injection is basically a 3way timed event totally controlled by a guru program. Air thru a valve, fuel from a jet and spark from a coil arrive on command. If any are out of calibration would there be a ping? I tend to agree with you but I need a beer, too.
the ONLY reasons we have ethanol is two fold
1) its cheaper for them to make and you need to buy more to go as far as real fuel
2) car manu love it as it wears the car out, making metal tanks, pipes, lines and injectors rot out - yes plastics can now mostly cope and hoses designed to cope since 2000 ish (MOSTLY)
there is NO environmental benefits its actually slightly worse - its just marketing clap trap and theft why we are forced to use it....
on my BMW bike the difference from usable low octane fuels, to the real deal was light and day - felt like a 20% performance uplift throughout the entire range - even idle was smoother. A lot of UK bike mags are saying they can measure the savings of using the much more expensive higher octane fuels as the lower ethanol content extends your mpg by more than the high cost per litre
the ONLY reasons we have ethanol is two fold
1) its cheaper for them to make and you need to buy more to go as far as real fuel
2) car manu love it as it wears the car out, making metal tanks, pipes, lines and injectors rot out - yes plastics can now mostly cope and hoses designed to cope since 2000 ish (MOSTLY)
there is NO environmental benefits its actually slightly worse - its just marketing clap trap and theft why we are forced to use it....
on my BMW bike the difference from usable low octane fuels, to the real deal was light and day - felt like a 20% performance uplift throughout the entire range - even idle was smoother. A lot of UK bike mags are saying they can measure the savings of using the much more expensive higher octane fuels as the lower ethanol content extends your mpg by more than the high cost per litre




the ONLY reasons we have ethanol is two fold
1) its cheaper for them to make and you need to buy more to go as far as real fuel
2) car manu love it as it wears the car out, making metal tanks, pipes, lines and injectors rot out - yes plastics can now mostly cope and hoses designed to cope since 2000 ish (MOSTLY)
there is NO environmental benefits its actually slightly worse - its just marketing clap trap and theft why we are forced to use it....
on my BMW bike the difference from usable low octane fuels, to the real deal was light and day - felt like a 20% performance uplift throughout the entire range - even idle was smoother. A lot of UK bike mags are saying they can measure the savings of using the much more expensive higher octane fuels as the lower ethanol content extends your mpg by more than the high cost per litre
In the nordic countries a liter bottle of pure ethanol in a tank of gas was used to fight water in the fuel in winter time. I’m not sure if this is still done because they have ethanol mixed in fuel like we do but you absolutely do want ethanol in your fuel at winter time. Ethanol mixes with water keeping it from freezing and this mixture burns thru the engine.
What other ingredient would you recommend for this purpose?
if there is an issue with water in fuel, the issue is usually the supply chain not the car, (you can test for ethanol by adding water shaking and seeing the two mix - google agrees its a way to try and mix so it gets burnt...) but for me putting ethanol in is effectively adding water and its also hygroscopic so its doing the opposite of helping any issues of water in the fuel
were they adding to tractor fuel to thin that rubbish due to waxing?
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Last edited by BOTUS; Nov 27, 2022 at 08:48 AM.








