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#102 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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we have 92 and 95 in Trinidad but the price for 95 recently shot through the roof so everyone is contemplating going with 92. Mind you, our quality of gas has been skeptical and 92 may very well not be 92 but something a bit lower.
My question is, is it safe for the R18 with a 10.5 : 1 ratio to run 92/91 grade gasoline? Does anyone else currently do this with no pinging even under load? |
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#105 (permalink) |
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Member
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well ill be the first to say this i have to run 87 right now in my car, and ill be the first to say you can tell a loss in performance. i live in nc and we are in a big gas shortage and all the gas stations are only getting 87 since its in high demand but soon as i see 93 or 100 get back i will be running that asap!!!!
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#106 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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I wish we had something other than 91 here in AZ. I miss the 93 that was available in FL. Has anyone used anything like 100 + octane (full tank) in their Si? I was thinking of going to the track and filling up with some. Will it be noticeable and would there be any risk of damage to the engine?
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#108 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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A 10.1:1 compression engine should have no problem running the 91 octane. It should even be safe for close to 89 to 87 for short and light load traveling. I wouldn't risk anything lower than 89 for sure though. If you do use the 91 and feel it isn't right, have it tested. There are several places that can test the octane content and give you an analysis (much like oil analysis'). If the fuel is consistantly off in rating and measurement, use some booster in a full tank and have it re-tested until you find the proper booster to fuel ratio. Sounds like a lot of crap to go through, but it shouldn't take but about 3 weeks of light driving and however long it takes to get a sample of each to a lab. May be on the expensive side, though. Well worth it versus another engine.
4cyl. Chevy S-10's have about 10:1 compression (if not mistaken) and I used regular with never an issue for 7 years. Newer cars may have different results though. To clear some things up, a ratio of 13:1 compression will have a hard time running smooth off of 93 octane - pump gas. 13:1 Mind you. Si's have 11.1 or 11.3:1 compression. That's perfectly capable of using 91 octane with no problems. Running higher octane other than 91 may give you some mileage gains, but unless you're running 103 octane you won't notice any difference between the Cal. normal 91 and the other 93 ratings. |
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#112 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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I'm in NC as well, I ran a tank of 87......won't ever do that again.
We, Si owners, have to run the good shit because our engines have 11:1 compression. When we run lower octane our engines will knock and ping. Thankfully we have very sensitive knock sensors. When they sense a knock they retard the timing, hence running like shit. If your boosted its even worst, WOT feels like your on a bucking bronco. Its a serious PITA to find a gas station here thats carring 93 octane. My solution has been to ride my sport bike more (its older, carburated, and Kawi recommends the cheap shit in it) If you can't afford the good stuff then you got the wrong car, if you can't find the good stuff then that just sucks. Oh ya I put some octane booster in mine and it helped a little. |
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#114 (permalink) |
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lexan man
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i HAD to run 89 in my car last week, I didn't really feel a noticable performance loss, but only beacuse i was babying the car until that stuff was gone, the one thing I will point out is the fuel economy, IDK for sure if it's a contributing factor, but the lower octane gas defiantely shot my gas mileage to hell
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#118 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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is there any record of anyone's engine getting messed up due to low octane? Note: I said low octane, not discount gas.
read the article: WHY PAY FOR PREMIUM GAS? |
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