Gasoline, are they all the same?
#17
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Originally Posted by evolucion
HAHAHA, well I guess I'mma be driving my hachiroku instead of my evo for a while.
No more Inital D for you my friend.
#18
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You probably wont see a difference between 87, 89 or 91 on a normal car like a corolla or a camry. But fill 87 in an Evo and you will hear engine knocking, not a pleasant sound! You will have to get a new motor.
#19
I was driving to St. PAul,MN from Chicago and running out of gas close to Eau Claire, WI and they only had **** 91 octane gas so I was stuck with it for a bit. I never went WOT (dyno flash with 93 octane) but man my idle got worst and it sucked! Got to MN and all they had was 92 octane.
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well i think the reason he made that statement because hes been sniffing on gas to get high, maybe thats y he thinks they are same. lol. ill give him a gas to sniff on, and its free.
#22
Originally Posted by GOKOU
I was driving to St. PAul,MN from Chicago and running out of gas close to Eau Claire, WI and they only had **** 91 octane gas so I was stuck with it for a bit. I never went WOT (dyno flash with 93 octane) but man my idle got worst and it sucked! Got to MN and all they had was 92 octane.
The gas station closest to my house (BP) had 93 octane, or at least we were led to believe that until I called BP's Gasoline Technical Hotline to ask why one BP station in town had 91 octane as their premium unleaded, another had 92 and mine had 93. I told him I didn't believe they were all different. He said he'd check into it. I'd already asked the owner if he was sure that it was 93 and he said yeah he was sure.
A few days later I noticed my station no longer had 93, it was now 91. I asked the owner what happened to the 93 and he threw up his arms and said, "They told me to change it."
BTW, many gas stations in WI (and probably the whole country) don't have the octane that's listed when they're tested.
#23
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All gas stations in america use the same fuel the only difference is the additives that the individual company adds to the fuel (amoco, chevron, exxon, etc.). When a company puts "X" number of barrels of fuel in to the pipeline system they can then take out those "X" number of barrels any where in the country that they need it and don't have to wait the approx. 13 days that it takes for it to reach the other side of the country. All gasoline is required to meet a certain quality before it is added to the system. The difference that you are noticing among gasoline stations is from the additives that they are using.
Discovery or history channel had an hour long program on fuel pipelines that oddly enough was very interesting to watch. But then again I will watch just about anything that is in High Definition.
Discovery or history channel had an hour long program on fuel pipelines that oddly enough was very interesting to watch. But then again I will watch just about anything that is in High Definition.
#24
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Originally Posted by Ralliartist
You're driving an 86 and hanging out at a gas station?
No more Inital D for you my friend.
No more Inital D for you my friend.
Both cars are fun to drive, but once I got back on the evo. Man I felt really bad for my 86. Slow piece of Shhh . But it's still a fun car to drive. Eversince I bought the 86 I been driving that more than the evo, not because of the gas price. But it's just fun and that it's not an attention grabber like the evo. Wished that it's as powerfull as the evo though .
I would like to see that episode on discovery channel about the the differents of gas. Should be interesting.
#25
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Originally Posted by Onikun
All gas stations in america use the same fuel the only difference is the additives that the individual company adds to the fuel (amoco, chevron, exxon, etc.). When a company puts "X" number of barrels of fuel in to the pipeline system they can then take out those "X" number of barrels any where in the country that they need it and don't have to wait the approx. 13 days that it takes for it to reach the other side of the country. All gasoline is required to meet a certain quality before it is added to the system. The difference that you are noticing among gasoline stations is from the additives that they are using.
Discovery or history channel had an hour long program on fuel pipelines that oddly enough was very interesting to watch. But then again I will watch just about anything that is in High Definition.
Discovery or history channel had an hour long program on fuel pipelines that oddly enough was very interesting to watch. But then again I will watch just about anything that is in High Definition.
As an aside I am one of those unbranded guys and used to actually do my own trucking of product.....my gas came from 1 of 2 places, Sunoco or Mobil. Suprisingly Mobil unbranded is the least expensive to buy at wholesale yet the most expensive on the retail end.
As to the guy who says his car runs better on X brand rather then A brand, its not in your head but has more to do with the state of the storage tanks at your particular gas station rather then the actuall name on the sign.
#26
Originally Posted by evovette
And as for using 87 octane and calling it 89, I doubt it. Most stations use blender style pumps now, where the 89 is just a mixture of super and regular, much in the same way one would make 97 octane using 91 octane and some 100 octane race gas. I have NO idea how they do it in other parts of the country but here in MASS they have suprise inspections, test for octane and measurment accuracy...
Drivers pumping premium into their gas tanks aren't always getting high-octane fuel and instead get swindled by service station owners and delivery drivers, a Journal Sentinel investigation has found.
How, Why It Happens
Station owners order too much regular gas on purpose.
They have haulers dump the excess into the premium tanks.
Drivers don't have to comply, but they are paid per delivery and usually rush so they can get to their next stop.
If a driver objects, the station owner may find a new hauler.
High-octane gas vital for high-performance engines
One of four doesn’t pass test
No one can say exactly how prevalent fraud at the pumps is because the state's octane testing program has been dysfunctional for years, regulators concede. But industry insiders and state petroleum inspectors say it is common.
"Gas is being mixed in the tanks improperly when it's delivered," said Marty Kehrein, president of Wisconsin State Inspectors Local 333, which represents Wisconsin's petroleum inspectors. "The octane might not be what it's stated to be, and they (inspectors) have been told by supervisors they can't investigate."
According to industry sources, corrupt station owners strike when they know the price of gas is going up the next day. Some watch the futures crude market on the Internet, others keep in close contact with distributors, still others watch for oil companies to post the following day's price hours before it takes effect.
Ordering too much
The station owners want to buy as much as they can before the new price kicks in, so they intentionally order too much regular no-lead gasoline, and when the trucks arrive to deliver it, there is not enough room in the station's storage tanks to handle it. Station owners or employees then tell the truck drivers to dump the extra into the premium tanks, which often aren't kept as full. They may even offer the drivers a tip for the switch.
"People make mistakes, but it's obvious some people are scheduling mistakes," said Greg Klimek, president of Klemm Tank Lines, Wisconsin's largest transport company. "The opportunity is definitely there."
The delivery drivers do not have to comply. They can call their company's dispatcher - as required - and seek another station to take the remaining load. But drivers are usually paid per delivery and rush to make as many drops as possible. Seeking another station slows them down and, ultimately, there may not be one that can take the blend or amount of fuel they're carrying.
In addition, if the driver objects, the station owner may find a new hauler.
"It's too much of a *****'s market," said the owner of one petroleum transport company, referring to competition among haulers. "There are too many guys that will truck their fuel." The transport company owner - who feared that having his name published would peg him as a rat and destroy his business - said he has lost contracts for not going along with the deception.
"I've worked hard to try and maintain integrity, but the industry and the people driving it make it almost impossible," he said. "Some of them are just . . . crooked. They can get away with it. There's nobody policing it."
Testing problems
Officials with the state Department of Commerce, which regulates petroleum, said they didn't find any octane fraud in Wisconsin last year. But that isn't saying much.
In 1995, the state spent nearly $300,000 on 14 fuel testing units, but there were "major problems" keeping the equipment calibrated and maintained, said Phil Albert, director of the bureau of petroleum products and tanks. Documents show the state spent more than $200,000 over the years servicing the machines but could not keep them consistently working.
"We called it the $20,000 nightlight," said one inspector who did not want his name published for fear of retribution from managers. "It was plugged in. There was a light on. But it just didn't work. . . . For nine years, these people (administrators) spent money on stuff they knew didn't work."
http://www.jsonline.com/news/metro/apr05/317263.asp
#30
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This has been covered before: http://www.toptiergas.com/