I see a whole bunch of misconceptions about gas, alcohol and Octane ratings here, as usual
Octane is a measure of how easily/quickly the fuel will explode. The lower the octane the more violent the explosion. Diesel produces more power/volume than gas and is lower octane. Bunker sea oil is even lower and produces even more power.
High octane fuel does NOT give you more power, by itself. High octane fuel was designed for the high performance 'muscle cars' of the 1960's. It was desinged to overcome the technology of the day that was having trouble with high compression engines and poor designs causing the fuel to preignite in the cylinders (detonation). Because Premium, or high octane fuel burns slower, it actually produces less horesepower.
The reason that the muscle cars engines used high octane, to produce more power, was that it allowed more timing to be used. and it was this tunability that added the horespower.
With modern engines most of this is a non-issue. However, the engine mfgs, specify high octane for 2 reasons, 1) they own lots of shares in the gas companies, and 2) Why not? anything to make absolutely sure there is no knock. ( and people think they are getting a 'performance' motor
I have one of the first 502/502 premium crate engines from GM Performance. It specifies premium fuel, and yet it is only 9.6:1 compression. I have used regular pump fuel in it for the last 9 years, on and off the drag strip with no problems.
Another issue with premium fuel is that all gasolines lose octane the longer they sit in the tank in the ground. Most stations sell very little premium fuel, so often the premium coming out at the pump is not the octane you are paying for. If you insist on using premium ask around your local dragstrip. You'll find that there will be one station that they all use as it has the 'freshest' premium fuel.
This is not usually a problem with regular as it is usually used up much quicker.
Alcohol: Ethanol produces less horsepower by volume than gas does, as mentioned, however, alcohol is a partially self-oxygenating fuel meaning you can burn more of it in the same volume of air. If you want to burn pure alcohol you can rejet and run @2.5 times as much alcohol in the engine as you could gas, at around double the horsepower. Thus Top alcohol funny cars at 2500+ horsepower. You would, of course, get serioulsy bad fuel mileage doing this.
This is why Formula One had to mandate fuel stops when they went back to gasoline from alcohol. With alcohol there was no choice, you had to stop somewhere in the race, w/gas they can do a whole race on one tank.
Alcohol burns a LOT cooler. If you ever watch the monster trucks or alcohol dragsters, you'll notice they idle them a lot before a match, this is to get some heat in the engine or the engine won't provide as much power.
Just as a note Nitro-methane can be run with @9x the fuel/air ratio. Nitro methane produces even less power/volume than gas or alcohol, yet top fuelers are 5000+ horespower.
Another note on premium fuel, mfgs may use any number of combinations to make thier fuel as cheap as possible. However, in U.S., Canada, etc. There are rules as to how much of these additives the can use. Most mfgs stipulate no more than 10% alcohol by volume for warranty purposes. So unless otherwise marked gas will have that or less. If your using fuel within these guidelines you shoul have no trouble with it.
MTBFE is a valve lubricant that replaced lead in gas. It has nothing to do with octane.
Alcohol absorbs water, which is what can cause corrosion in the fuel system. If you use up your gas fairly often this is not a problem, but it's not a good idea to let high ( more than 10%) alcohol fuels sit in the tank for months at a time. However, in the cold climates you will never need gasline antifreeze!
Octane is a measure of how easily/quickly the fuel will explode. The lower the octane the more violent the explosion. Diesel produces more power/volume than gas and is lower octane. Bunker sea oil is even lower and produces even more power.
High octane fuel does NOT give you more power, by itself. High octane fuel was designed for the high performance 'muscle cars' of the 1960's. It was desinged to overcome the technology of the day that was having trouble with high compression engines and poor designs causing the fuel to preignite in the cylinders (detonation). Because Premium, or high octane fuel burns slower, it actually produces less horesepower.
The reason that the muscle cars engines used high octane, to produce more power, was that it allowed more timing to be used. and it was this tunability that added the horespower.
With modern engines most of this is a non-issue. However, the engine mfgs, specify high octane for 2 reasons, 1) they own lots of shares in the gas companies, and 2) Why not? anything to make absolutely sure there is no knock. ( and people think they are getting a 'performance' motor
I have one of the first 502/502 premium crate engines from GM Performance. It specifies premium fuel, and yet it is only 9.6:1 compression. I have used regular pump fuel in it for the last 9 years, on and off the drag strip with no problems.
Another issue with premium fuel is that all gasolines lose octane the longer they sit in the tank in the ground. Most stations sell very little premium fuel, so often the premium coming out at the pump is not the octane you are paying for. If you insist on using premium ask around your local dragstrip. You'll find that there will be one station that they all use as it has the 'freshest' premium fuel.
This is not usually a problem with regular as it is usually used up much quicker.
Alcohol: Ethanol produces less horsepower by volume than gas does, as mentioned, however, alcohol is a partially self-oxygenating fuel meaning you can burn more of it in the same volume of air. If you want to burn pure alcohol you can rejet and run @2.5 times as much alcohol in the engine as you could gas, at around double the horsepower. Thus Top alcohol funny cars at 2500+ horsepower. You would, of course, get serioulsy bad fuel mileage doing this.
This is why Formula One had to mandate fuel stops when they went back to gasoline from alcohol. With alcohol there was no choice, you had to stop somewhere in the race, w/gas they can do a whole race on one tank.
Alcohol burns a LOT cooler. If you ever watch the monster trucks or alcohol dragsters, you'll notice they idle them a lot before a match, this is to get some heat in the engine or the engine won't provide as much power.
Just as a note Nitro-methane can be run with @9x the fuel/air ratio. Nitro methane produces even less power/volume than gas or alcohol, yet top fuelers are 5000+ horespower.
Another note on premium fuel, mfgs may use any number of combinations to make thier fuel as cheap as possible. However, in U.S., Canada, etc. There are rules as to how much of these additives the can use. Most mfgs stipulate no more than 10% alcohol by volume for warranty purposes. So unless otherwise marked gas will have that or less. If your using fuel within these guidelines you shoul have no trouble with it.
MTBFE is a valve lubricant that replaced lead in gas. It has nothing to do with octane.
Alcohol absorbs water, which is what can cause corrosion in the fuel system. If you use up your gas fairly often this is not a problem, but it's not a good idea to let high ( more than 10%) alcohol fuels sit in the tank for months at a time. However, in the cold climates you will never need gasline antifreeze!
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