Having trouble getting registered or subscribing? Email us at info@kysportsreport.com or Private Message CitizenBBN and we'll get you set up!

Results 1 to 12 of 12
  1. #1

    Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Will that automatically "blend" to a 90-octane gas tank?

    I know this sounds stupid, but my car says it "requires" premium gas, but at 91-octane. I generally get premium 93-octane gas at Costco, which is the cheapest in my area, usually by 25-40 cents a gallon (has been more). I wonder if I got something more than half the tank 93-octane, then filled up the rest with 87-octane if it would satisfy the "requirement?"

    I have read numerous people with the same car, and have seen all kind of opinions--some say it is fine to run 87-octane, no matter what the manual says. Others say they don't get as good of gas mileage. Others say it hurts the engine in the long run. Others say they're full of you-know-what. Anyway, this isn't a debate on whether I *can* or not--I am going to abide by what it says--my question is solely whether I am in compliance if I "blend" it myself this way?

  2. #2

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    I can't imagine why it wouldn't work out to an average if you mixed them, unless there are different additives to get to those numbers. In that case the concentrations of such things may matter, falling below some threshold creating a more than linear impact on the reaction.

    But if it's not about the additives and different formulas and just a difference in purity or such then one would think that you'd get an average.

    But you never know. I still wake up at night in cold sweats over the apparently contradictory nature of the Monty Hall problem in statistics.
    People keep asking if I'm back and I haven't really had an answer. But now, yeah, I'm thinkin' I'm back.

  3. #3
    Bombino
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Kirkland, WA
    Posts
    2,806

    Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Quote Originally Posted by Darrell KSR View Post
    Will that automatically "blend" to a 90-octane gas tank?

    I know this sounds stupid, but my car says it "requires" premium gas, but at 91-octane. I generally get premium 93-octane gas at Costco, which is the cheapest in my area, usually by 25-40 cents a gallon (has been more). I wonder if I got something more than half the tank 93-octane, then filled up the rest with 87-octane if it would satisfy the "requirement?"

    I have read numerous people with the same car, and have seen all kind of opinions--some say it is fine to run 87-octane, no matter what the manual says. Others say they don't get as good of gas mileage. Others say it hurts the engine in the long run. Others say they're full of you-know-what. Anyway, this isn't a debate on whether I *can* or not--I am going to abide by what it says--my question is solely whether I am in compliance if I "blend" it myself this way?
    From my memory octanes are not quite additive but close enough for what you want. That being said, using a lower octane will not damage your engine. It certaiy might cause worse gas milage if the engine is tuned for higher octane levels. It also might run notably noisier, but this is more rare.

    Sent from my LG-LS998 using Tapatalk

  4. #4
    Fab Five Catfan73's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Louisville, KY
    Posts
    17,699

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenBBN View Post
    I can't imagine why it wouldn't work out to an average if you mixed them, unless there are different additives to get to those numbers. In that case the concentrations of such things may matter, falling below some threshold creating a more than linear impact on the reaction.

    But if it's not about the additives and different formulas and just a difference in purity or such then one would think that you'd get an average.

    But you never know. I still wake up at night in cold sweats over the apparently contradictory nature of the Monty Hall problem in statistics.
    ALWAYS change doors if given the choice lol. It still bothers me too.
    changing my signature to change our luck.

  5. #5

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    OK, thanks. I'll start filling up my tank to obtain that mix. Appreciate it. Will save me about $5-6 every tank.

  6. #6

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Your vehicle must use only unleaded gasoline.
    Premium unleaded gasoline with an octane rating of 91 (Research Octane
    Number 96) or higher required for optimum engine performance. If 91
    octane cannot be obtained, you may use unleaded gasoline with an octane
    rating as low as 87 (Research Octane Number 91). Use of unleaded gasoline
    with an octane rating lower than 91 may result in engine knocking. Persistent
    knocking can lead to engine damage and should be corrected by
    refueling with higher octane unleaded gasoline.

  7. #7
    Fab Five dan_bgblue's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Bowling Green, KY
    Posts
    44,514

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    If the retail location where you buy your fuel has 3 different grades available for purchase, then the middle grade is already being blended for you inside the pump as most retail locations only have 2 storage tanks in the ground, one for the 91 to 93 octane fuel and one for the 87 octane fuel.
    seeya
    dan

    I'm just one stomach flu away from my goal weight.

  8. #8
    Fiddlin' Five badrose's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Deep in the Heart of the Enemy
    Posts
    6,985

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenBBN View Post
    I can't imagine why it wouldn't work out to an average if you mixed them, unless there are different additives to get to those numbers. In that case the concentrations of such things may matter, falling below some threshold creating a more than linear impact on the reaction.

    But if it's not about the additives and different formulas and just a difference in purity or such then one would think that you'd get an average.

    But you never know. I still wake up at night in cold sweats over the apparently contradictory nature of the Monty Hall problem in statistics.
    Always go with the curtain where Carol Merrill is now standing.
    Cool as a rule, but sometimes bad is bad.

  9. #9

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Quote Originally Posted by dan_bgblue View Post
    If the retail location where you buy your fuel has 3 different grades available for purchase, then the middle grade is already being blended for you inside the pump as most retail locations only have 2 storage tanks in the ground, one for the 91 to 93 octane fuel and one for the 87 octane fuel.
    Costco only has 87 octane and 93 octane. It's Top Tier gasoline, and the best price in town, though.

    Very interesting about the two storage tanks and them blending it themselves. I was unaware of that.

  10. #10

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    A shame UKfaninCincy isn't around, he would know this one in great detail.

    Re the Monty Hall thing, I'm not kidding. That one still gets to me. Somewhere in that I'm sure is the mathematical secret to travel in time and space.
    People keep asking if I'm back and I haven't really had an answer. But now, yeah, I'm thinkin' I'm back.

  11. #11

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Darrell, have you tried an octane booster in the less expensive gas?

    https://www.walmart.com/ip/STP-Octan...-25oz/16817401

  12. #12

    Re: Dumb question....if I fill a tank up with 50% 93-octane gas and 50% 87-octane gas

    Keith, I have not, but I'll look into it. Thanks for the suggestion.

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •