Canyon707
Enthusiast
DC did my computer with 91 octane I was just wondering if there might be a slight advantage using 93 at the drag strip. I guess I will just keep running 91 it seems fine no detonation.
Yes, more resistance to preignition with 93 octane. Chances are you won't feel any difference with 93. But you can hook up a computer and watch how much timing your knock sensors are pulling. If 91 octane doesn't pull any timing, then 93 will be no added benefit.
I refine the crude that makes gasoline, and I still don't understand the "Nitrogen enriched fuel" marketing. Nitrogen is something we remove from oil when we treat it. Essentially the best oil would have 0ppm N2 in the product. We treat it higher than that, because they don't want to waste money over treating, when industry only demands a minimum of say 5ppm for example. So "Nitrogen Enriched", just tells me that the refinery relaxed their minimum targets, and you're now getting worse gasoline.
Nitrogen is an inert element. So in theory any nitrogen you add to your gas, would only serve to take up volume space that could be filled with gasoline, causing you to burn more gas to create the same power.
And wow, this is an old thread................
Different type of nitrogen. These are soluble, not solid or gaseous versions. They are the massive majority of many kinds of cleaning addiitves.
Think of ammonia, the common cleaner. Works pretty good, and is the simplest form of such a nitrogen compound. To make it work in fuels, chemists need to attach a "tail" so it becomes soluble in gasoline. And then to make it "work" it has to lose it's tail at the appropriate temperature, so the connection between the nitrogen "head" and the hydrocarbon-like "tail" comes apart. At this point there are many, many versions of "aminated" additives; polyether amines such as in Chevron gasoline and Techron additive, polybutene amines as sold by other additive companies, etc, etc.
The same holds for lube oil additives; there is a different type of tail, a different type of connection, but still some kind of nitrogen-bearing head to do the cleaning.
DC did my computer with 91 octane I was just wondering if there might be a slight advantage using 93 at the drag strip. I guess I will just keep running 91 it seems fine no detonation.
Tom,
Thanks for all the detailed answers!!
I just picked up a 91 Suburban with a 1/4 tank of 2 year old gas. I'm going to run it dry and then fill the tank to get the truck smogged.
Is it better to run low octane or high octane when getting a smog check on a questionable vehicle? My gut says 87 since it burns easier (and in my mind more complete).
The truck is stock, Chevy 350 TBI with the old style pancake catalytic converter.
Is there anything else you would recommed to add in the first tank with the fresh fuel (additive-wise that would help it pass smog)? I know in previous discussions that additives clean and can get rid of hot spots that cause pre-ignition....but can these additives also increase the measured smog level in hyper sensitive California?
Look forward to your response.
Cheers,
George
DC did my computer with 91 octane I was just wondering if there might be a slight advantage using 93 at the drag strip. I guess I will just keep running 91 it seems fine no detonation.
Wow, she has the biggest...
watch on her wrist!
(See Dave, AIDA works!)
Tom, what gas do you feed your Viper?
And what Gas you are trying to avoid?