Never Use This Gas In Your Car!

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  • Опубліковано 27 кві 2024
  • How 85 Octane Fuel Can Destroy Your Engine And Void Your Warranty
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    It's very important to put the correct fuel in your car, whether that's 87 regular gas, or 91 premium gas. Using the wrong fuel, at an octane rating too low for your vehicle, can result in severe engine damage caused by knock. Lower octane rating fuels are more susceptible to knock. In some high elevation states, 85 octane fuel is sold, which should not be used by modern cars.
    Why would we sell a fuel in the United States that could destroy your engine? Well it worked just fine with old, carbureted cars. But modern cars with electronic fuel injection and electronic ignition timing don't like it. Why not? Watch the video to see why this fuel is still sold today, how elevation impacts octane rating, and why modern cars can't use it. It can even void your warranty! Wild.
    Related Links:
    1942 Study - nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/jre...
    1956 Study - doi.org/10.4271/560080
    1987 Study - doi.org/10.4271/872160
    F-150 Owner's Manual - www.fordservicecontent.com/Fo...
    U.S. DOE - www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/octan...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4 тис.

  • @EngineeringExplained
    @EngineeringExplained  2 роки тому +420

    **Some additional important information!**
    Modern turbocharged engines are based on absolute pressure, so they will attempt to match the cylinder pressure when at elevation to that of sea-level by providing more boost (with a lower baseline atmospheric pressure). Because you have the same amount of air in the cylinder, but are using a lower grade fuel, you can run into knock issues - hence, this is especially important to avoid doing with modern turbo engines. That said, even the engines tested from 1987 showed that the Octane # drop requirement was significantly less for "modern" engines (again, 1987), regardless of induction method, so this is not an exclusive problem to turbo engines.
    Does Europe have higher octane fuel? No, explained here - ua-cam.com/video/zf-OYXlhJis/v-deo.html
    Is premium gas actually worth it? Not always, explained here - ua-cam.com/video/dxAQmj3P8xs/v-deo.html
    Octane vs Cetane - what's the difference? Explained here - ua-cam.com/video/OqV5L70-MUE/v-deo.html
    Is Ethanol bad for your engine? Explained here - ua-cam.com/video/ATGSBi1kBl0/v-deo.html
    *Important Edit:* E85 gas ≠ 85 Octane gas. E85 is 85% ethanol and has a very high octane rating (100+). 85 Octane gas is at max (if sold as regular gas) 10% ethanol and has an octane rating of 85. Do not use E85 if your car is not made for it (generally these cars are labeled as FlexFuel).

    • @proximusadiemus8731
      @proximusadiemus8731 2 роки тому +4

      Great video and explanation like always... BUT, can you make a part 2 where you will talk thru maybe potential problem with that same F150 if I import that vehicle in Europe and put in it 100 octane fuel ⛽ 😁 🤔

    • @brettdavis9575
      @brettdavis9575 2 роки тому +7

      Hi Jason, talk to us about your thoughts on this new Unleaded88/E15 that's being advertised.

    • @ctbrahmstedt
      @ctbrahmstedt 2 роки тому +8

      In Colorado, where I live, the highest grade gas you can get is 91. If I were lucky enough to have a vehicle that requires 93, but only put in 91, would the vehicle knock it's brains out, or can most modern vehicles cope and retard the timing to keep the cylinder pressures out of the no-no zone under high load?

    • @stephenjacks8196
      @stephenjacks8196 2 роки тому +2

      Seems kinda IGNORANT because almost all newer vehicles are fuel injected. Octane rating is for carbuerated engines. Preignition occurs when air and gasoline are premixed. By the way our lab used to test gasoline, today's "85 octane" is usually 10 points less using ASTM standard test engine. EPA certified (required in the US) engine delays injection and ignition are degrees past top dead center. Modern cars are not allowed to be designed for peak performance as that generates Nitrogen Oxides (NOx).

    • @borysnijinski331
      @borysnijinski331 2 роки тому +17

      @@stephenjacks8196 woah, dude…not even close. You have no clue…what you wrote is way off base.

  • @KF1
    @KF1 2 роки тому +2635

    within literally 2 min 10,000 people showed up to learn from a lecture in front of a white board. Doin' something right, man.

    • @calholli
      @calholli 2 роки тому +16

      He has 3 million subs. lol.. 10k is nothing

    • @AliasHSW
      @AliasHSW 2 роки тому +16

      This goes to shows high tech is not (always) the best tech.

    • @strangeclouds7
      @strangeclouds7 2 роки тому +19

      @@calholli Subs don't always translate to views

    • @dielaughing73
      @dielaughing73 2 роки тому +8

      @@calholli that's exactly their point

    • @boozecruiser
      @boozecruiser 2 роки тому +10

      Higher education is out of reach to normal Americans who don't want to spend their live as a debt slave

  • @ShortHax
    @ShortHax 2 роки тому +2478

    Jason’s videos need to be played on repeat at the DMVs

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  2 роки тому +601

      As if the experience couldn't get any *more* boring! 😂

    • @HeartTribe
      @HeartTribe 2 роки тому +70

      @@EngineeringExplained oh man, if that were the case you'd catch me there on time everytime I needed to be there lol.

    • @youkofoxy
      @youkofoxy 2 роки тому +36

      @@EngineeringExplained I kinda have to agree, despite your efforts you don't have enough content to avoid repetition during the wait at DMV.

    • @mjc0961
      @mjc0961 2 роки тому +35

      @@CedroCron If gas pumps started playing EE videos instead of ads, I'd be so much happier about going to the gas station.

    • @ts31966
      @ts31966 2 роки тому +17

      @@EngineeringExplained hahahahaha, boring depends on your perspective.
      A sixteen year old girl that daddy buys all her cars. Boring!!!!!!
      A guy who has no financial help and knows how hard his local car mechanic is screwing him....Engineering Explained is the best channel EVER!!!

  • @jaslionel7273
    @jaslionel7273 2 роки тому +160

    Good to know. Thanks for keeping things in perspective. I used to own a '98 Taurus (not an HO but the "fleet car" kind) that "pinged" terribly when accelerating, so I started using premium gas to try and prevent detonation. So when I tried to explain to a service rep at the dealership he told me that I was making the engine pinging worse by using premium gas instead of regular 87 octane. Go figure. It just shows that a lot of people have difficulty understanding how octane in gasoline effects engine performance.

    • @roboticvenom1935
      @roboticvenom1935 Рік тому +18

      yeah that's silly, ona. 98 taurus it shouldn't have much of an effect, definitely wont hurt it by putting better fuel, but on newer cars that are much more advanced, and ESPECIALLY if tehy're turbocharged, putting 91 or 93 is better for the engine and you'll likey pick up some horsepower, also depends on the motor. mazda's 2.5 turbo can be used with 87 fuel and makes 227horse and 251 horse on 93, and more torque

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 11 місяців тому +6

      @@roboticvenom1935 "Premium" fuel isn't "better" fuel.

    • @sategllib2191
      @sategllib2191 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@mplslawnguy not any cleaner. But for performance it does

    • @tomasprieto9746
      @tomasprieto9746 10 місяців тому +16

      That makes no sense, higher octane absolutely has higher knock resistance.

    • @imzjustplayin
      @imzjustplayin 2 місяці тому +3

      Ignore the people that say the Premium fuel didn't help. If you think it helped, it likely did help. I've seen many instances of different octane fuels either helping or hurting the vehicle. One person I know always put premium in vehicles so when they had an eagle talon, it ran terribly with the Premium fuel and I told them they needed to use regular with this car and they did and it ran much better. It's always vehicle specific so I think there is no issue with trying different octane fuel and monitoring its effects.

  • @ReivecS
    @ReivecS 2 роки тому +64

    This video was great for explaining a confusion I had when I was visiting Utah with a rented car and had to fill up. I immediately noticed the numbers on the octane were different and I had no idea why that was the case. Thanks for informing me as to how this came to be.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 11 місяців тому +2

      ssooo 87 good 86 and below is bad unless your driving a car from the stone age got it🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @buffuniballer
      @buffuniballer 11 місяців тому +4

      Since it was a rental, it was okay to put 85 AKI fuel in the vehicle.

    • @DarkAttack14
      @DarkAttack14 Місяць тому

      ​@@raven4k998more like if you're in Denver a mile above sea level you want lower octane ;)

  • @milinddixit6583
    @milinddixit6583 2 роки тому +959

    At this point in the UK, I'd put anything in my car as long as it makes it move.

    • @rjung_ch
      @rjung_ch 2 роки тому +65

      Empty shelves are also common, looks like pictures from the old Ussr days mate. Hope you all get this solved sooner than later

    • @davidellis1355
      @davidellis1355 2 роки тому +26

      Also from the UK, I'd get used to walking

    • @35RSkyline
      @35RSkyline 2 роки тому +6

      :( sadly I understand your pain.

    • @NB-kh5jf
      @NB-kh5jf 2 роки тому +8

      Wtf is happening there, I saw some pictures but don't know the context.?

    • @loickl
      @loickl 2 роки тому +57

      @@NB-kh5jf lack of truck drivers, lack of stock, brexit impact. A secret report from an oil company has been published that stocks are low and created a big panick buy that made it worst. That is what i understood of it.

  • @MadeNewOmaha
    @MadeNewOmaha 2 роки тому +326

    I wish I was still teaching high school automotive repair classes. This video would be perfect for explaining Octane ratings and how they work. Thanks for making awesome content!

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  2 роки тому +48

      Thanks for the kind words!

    • @taylorc2542
      @taylorc2542 2 роки тому +4

      Dude, you're a teacher, this is something you should be able to explain yourself. It'll hit much harder coming from you.

    • @jackhughman282
      @jackhughman282 2 роки тому +20

      @@taylorc2542 just cus he's a teacher doesn't mean he can't use learning aides, different things work for different people. A video explaining it slightly differently + visualization in addition to his way of showing it might be beneficial to certain students. I know it would help me for example.
      Throughout college I found myself constantly looking for multiple examples of things on UA-cam or forums or Google because sometimes however the teachers explained it didn't cut it for my brain, other times I just needed a reiteration or I missed something.

    • @evanc6110
      @evanc6110 2 роки тому +1

      @@jackhughman282 p

    • @cjaydok
      @cjaydok 2 роки тому +1

      @@evanc6110 p

  • @mmytacist
    @mmytacist 2 місяці тому +58

    2 years later and this is still useful. Driving x-country from Calif to Florida. Refueled my 2024 Honda somewhere before Albuquerque and wasn't using my brain when I picked the fuel button at the far left. As I was refueling I saw it was 85 octane. And 10% ethanol. Drove on across I-40 for about 300 miles and filled up again with normal gas in Amarillo. Never heard knocks, not towing anything, keep it under 80.
    But I kept wondering about that 85 octane... until now!

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Місяць тому +2

      gas that can kill your car and it's sold to do that one.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
      why can they do this one but not sell renewable fuels alcohol based to save the environment?🤔

    • @mikebradford7780
      @mikebradford7780 Місяць тому +7

      ​@@SaraMorgan-ym6ueClueless lie.

    • @artosbear
      @artosbear 19 днів тому

      So it was fine you mean? Wow amazing it was fine.
      Because it's fine. You aren't driving a damn motorcycle

    •  День тому +1

      Based on your mistake described, if you where at a Chevron station you would have filled up with supreme.
      Then that would open up a whole other can of deception

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue День тому

      and Drink it like water💀💀

  • @noremorse6898
    @noremorse6898 2 роки тому +9

    I live in the Denver area and have always used 87 octane in my cars, which is labeled midgrade here. What really ticks me off is that over time the price gap between 85 and 87 has risen from 10 cents to 30 cents per gallon. I can’t believe there’s any justification for that, when I can drive to a neighboring low altitude state and buy 87 octane for less than what 85 costs in Colorado.

    • @jerwatson79
      @jerwatson79 2 роки тому

      We are dealing with $1.54 per litre here. You guys have it lucky down there

    • @mikej238
      @mikej238 11 місяців тому +1

      Liberal state taxes

  • @beltaxxe
    @beltaxxe 2 роки тому +549

    The fact that the laws are based around old carb engines is just a testiment to how out dated current laws are.

    • @reelreeler8778
      @reelreeler8778 2 роки тому +85

      and is a testament to how effective lobbyists are

    • @Kandralla
      @Kandralla 2 роки тому +30

      I have more "old carb" engines around my house than I have new and I'm not even trying.

    • @lamoona4269
      @lamoona4269 2 роки тому +46

      @@Kandralla yea but most people don't.

    • @nelsblair2667
      @nelsblair2667 2 роки тому +31

      Moving at the speed of Congress. Even the glaciers move significantly faster; which may be why so many glaciers are gone.

    • @spacetoast7783
      @spacetoast7783 2 роки тому +4

      @@reelreeler8778 you mean ineffective

  • @andresperez8382
    @andresperez8382 2 роки тому +284

    1:22 I think you should say that octane is the fuel’s resistance to pre-detonation or pre-ignition instead of knock since this is what causes knock and it isn’t knock itself

    • @Fausto_4841
      @Fausto_4841 2 роки тому +19

      Yeah, I was really surprised to hear him say that’s what octane means. Specially so early on in the video. Made me wonder what else he was going to get slightly wrong that I wouldn’t catch.

    • @JaydenET
      @JaydenET 2 роки тому +10

      Other way around
      Knock, detonation, pinging, etc is when spark timing is too advanced and cylinder pressures get so high from that spark event that some of the mixture combusts from pressure rather than the flame front.
      Pre-ignition, is typically caused by hotspots, caused by carbon buildup, lean afr, or detonation. The mixture ignites before the spark event occurs, the engine is basically dieseling. Pre meaning pre-spark event

    • @Discretesignals
      @Discretesignals 2 роки тому +11

      @@JaydenET Knock occurs because of multiple flame fronts occurring at the same time inside a combustion chamber. Detonation happens after the spark event and can result in knock. Preignition just means the fuel/air mixture ignited prior to spark the event. Dieseling or engine run on is basically auto ignition of an fuel/air mixture after the ignition system is turned off. Dieseling was pretty much eliminated by fuel injection and carbs with anti dieseling solenoids.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 2 роки тому +35

      There's nothing wrong with what he said, he's using the word knock as a blanket term and there's no need splitting hairs and turning this into a video mostly about the different types of that phenomenon when it's about the dangers of using high altitude low octane fuel in something with a turbo, stay on point here.

    • @joehoover7711
      @joehoover7711 2 роки тому +2

      @@Fausto_4841 he neglects to differentiate 85unleaded vs e85 e85 has an octane of 100

  • @jamesyates5191
    @jamesyates5191 11 місяців тому +105

    That is the best explanation of 85 vs 87 octane I’ve ever seen. I drive a 2022 Newmar motor home with Ford V8 and never put 85 octane in it. Thank you

    • @Kacpa2
      @Kacpa2 2 місяці тому +4

      87 is already very bad especially for turbo charged cars, only because of direct injection and tuning tricks it barely scraping by without knock on 87 and at ultimate cost to power output and efficiency. 85 is is just for most lazy tuned rich running naturally aspirated engines with very low compression.

    • @user-ut3ck8ok5m
      @user-ut3ck8ok5m Місяць тому +1

      I used to haul fuel and 87 is just 85 with a 1 percent blend of ethanol all you need is some additive to raise the octane rating

    • @Davido50
      @Davido50 17 днів тому

      ​@@user-ut3ck8ok5m Good pts.

  • @hondaben7969
    @hondaben7969 Рік тому +8

    Thanks for putting this together. I've been selling Honda vehicles for 17 years. I live and work at about 700ft of elevation in the Driftless region. It's nice to have this video to share with my customers who are asking about their mountain trips with their families in their new rides.

  • @DJR5280
    @DJR5280 2 роки тому +201

    I live in Denver. 85 is at every station here. The reason they use it is because they make more $$$$. They can upcharge that much more for 87 or 91. If I'm in Phoenix 87 is the minimum octane rating at pumps and it's cheaper than our 85 in Denver. Just sad.

    • @WorasLT
      @WorasLT 2 роки тому +2

      Whereas back in Lithuanian - 95 is minimum and everywhere, 98 is common too, but less likely.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace 2 роки тому +30

      @@WorasLT But that's not directly comparable to USA's AKI, or we'd be using it in aeroplanes here (if it has no lead.)

    • @andresamson8859
      @andresamson8859 2 роки тому +4

      dude don't come in Quebec, our price is equivalent to 5,50$/gal for 87octone. After US/CAD conversion, it's still above 4.30$/gal.

    • @MrKurbek
      @MrKurbek 2 роки тому +3

      Hello fellow Denverite!

    • @mowcowbell
      @mowcowbell 2 роки тому +5

      @@Guy_de_Loimbard ding ding! Correct answer! 85 octane is even available in lower altitude areas like Amarillo, TX.

  • @eightballsidepocket
    @eightballsidepocket 2 роки тому +182

    Useless Trivia: The footage of the truck towing the travel trailer is outside Yarnell, AZ. Great little piece of highway. Got my last speeding ticket in my GTI on that two lane section. One reason why I am an off-roader now; fewer traffic laws. LOL

    • @dobiedude7479
      @dobiedude7479 2 роки тому +2

      I used to ride my sport bike up that hill. What a blast

    • @genemasters4986
      @genemasters4986 2 роки тому +2

      I know that area of highway 71 well... speeding tickets are quite frequent there... wide open road heading Southeast to junction with 93.

    • @be5952
      @be5952 2 роки тому +5

      @Jesse Ansell --- May seem "useless", but I still like reading about people's little corners of the world. Thanks for that :)

    • @roguethrax
      @roguethrax 2 роки тому +1

      Ah yeah that's a super common route we take to cruise to flagstaff. We hit it super early in the morning when there isn't any traffic.
      These days I usually stick to the track though!

  • @itsalgud1459
    @itsalgud1459 2 роки тому +10

    Yet another excellent video, Jason, I really appreciate your knowledge of engines and especially, your natural talent as a teacher.

  • @d.jensen5153
    @d.jensen5153 2 роки тому +39

    My Honda CRV 'Earth Dreams' engine has never seen anything but 85 Octane. After 100,000 miles it still runs like a dream. But it's never been anywhere near sea level.

    • @calebmenker988
      @calebmenker988 2 місяці тому +6

      Yea I've got an MDX that's run on 85 for 21 years and it still runs absolutely beautifully

    • @AlWorth9738
      @AlWorth9738 Місяць тому +1

      @@calebmenker988 those are toy cars

    • @cartere9981
      @cartere9981 Місяць тому

      @@AlWorth9738bro stfu they are pretty high compression engines, bet they make more hp/liter then your American car, assuming you have a American car cause of your comment. Ignorance is common with American car owners

    • @mikebradford7780
      @mikebradford7780 Місяць тому

      Actually its just a car.​@@AlWorth9738

    • @VoidSinister
      @VoidSinister Місяць тому +6

      ​@@AlWorth9738 what car do you have, big boy?

  • @haqitman
    @haqitman 2 роки тому +59

    Thank you Jason for addressing this! Back in the 70s and 80s in the Intermountain West, regular leaded was 87 and unleaded was 85, even if you lived at a relatively low elevation like 2000 feet. You had no other unleaded fuel option and 85 octane unleaded was some 5% to 10% more expensive than leaded regular. What's unfortunate is that most people back then knew the dangers of lead and would have paid the same or a little more for an equal octane unleaded but it just wasn't available. Instead it was very common for people to yank out the catalytic converter so they could simply run better fuel because, in reality, car performance suffered significantly when the timing was backed off enough to be able to run on that 85 octane garbage no matter what elevation you lived at. It wasn't until the late 80s that unleaded premium became available and you could get decent performance again. Fuel in the US is relatively cheap, but it's a substandard product. If octane ratings were required to be in the mid 90s, we could get away with engines that are smaller and more fuel efficient yet still make the same power via higher compression ratios or forced induction.

    • @brolohalflemming7042
      @brolohalflemming7042 2 роки тому +6

      Sadly, it seems to be politics, along with lobbying from agriculture. So E85 can be promoted as a 'green' fuel because it's adulterated with ethanol made from corn. If it reduces efficiency and damages your car, well, that's your problem. But the suppliers are saving the planet.

    • @haqitman
      @haqitman 2 роки тому +15

      @@brolohalflemming7042 I don't think we're talking about the same thing. E85 is very high octane fuel, something like 100 plus. When unleaded came out in the mid 70s, it was 85 octane in our area and cars had a hard time running on it and there was no alternative.

    • @logainfalsedragon3587
      @logainfalsedragon3587 2 роки тому +15

      @@brolohalflemming7042 E-85 is nothing like 85 octane gasoline. E-85 is 51-85% ethanol alcohol, aka drinking alcohol, depending on your location in the US. It's cut with gasoline to aid with cold weather starting. The colder your location the more dino gas it has. E-85's octane rating (100-105) exceeds most offerings at the pump. It's the poor man's nitromethane, as long as you can remove the gasoline and water it absorbed. Is it terrible fuel mileage, compared to dino gas? Yes. Does E-85 damage the fuel system? Yes, if you don't replace the components that get damaged over time for ones that aren't affected by ethanol, but to sit there and compare it to a substandard fuel, like 85 octane, please do some research before you let your fingers do your talking

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 2 роки тому +1

      @@brolohalflemming7042 Sugarcane and beets are much more efficient sources of bioethanol than corn anyways. It's been demonstrated countless times that corn ethanol's net energy balance is a _big negative_ but the only reason we do it is because of corn lobbyists.

    • @haqitman
      @haqitman 2 роки тому +1

      @Lassi Kinnunen 81 There's a big difference between 85 and 87 octane. Back in the day I'd have to back the ignition timing off 4 degrees to run on 85, else the engine would ping and clatter badly, power and mileage dropped.

  • @JKZ3r0
    @JKZ3r0 2 роки тому +3

    All your videos are very well structured and the topic at hand is always extremely well explained. Very educational and something more people should watch regularly. Thank you and keep up the great work.

  • @OldBanHammer
    @OldBanHammer 2 роки тому +62

    The rub that really stings is, here in Utah with the 85 octane regular fuel; we have some of the highest prices in the country. The oil industry is ripping people off.

    • @moto5513
      @moto5513 Рік тому +17

      No way you have some of the highest prices in the country, in California the price is almost $3.00 a gallon more.

    • @derek133
      @derek133 Рік тому +9

      I just did a road trip from Washington through Utah and California. Utah was the cheapest by far. You lucky people!

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo 2 місяці тому +1

      CA is still higher than "Yew Tah". It's all a matter of supply v. demand, though. Utah's economy is relatively prosperous, so the price the retailers get will tend to be higher. CA's is still higher NOT because of any "better" economy (in fact, it's in the toilet), but due to insanely HIGH TAXES.

    • @Schetmesa
      @Schetmesa 2 місяці тому +2

      Yea and you have two refineries there

    • @senorpepper3405
      @senorpepper3405 2 місяці тому

      But atleast you can have more than 1 wyfe😂

  • @almuliman
    @almuliman 2 роки тому +96

    Perfect timing. I'm visiting and driving through Utah into Arizona and came across 85 octane gas yesterday. Definitely made me go "Whaaaa...?!?". Now I know. And no, I chose 87 😉

    • @fzr2k840
      @fzr2k840 2 роки тому +7

      You chose well. I once put in 85 during a road trip and it messed the car up. Enjoy your trip!

    • @TriNguyen-nl7qo
      @TriNguyen-nl7qo 2 роки тому +1

      @@fzr2k840 Did you have an octane booster with you when you put the wrong gas in your tank?

    • @jimmym3352
      @jimmym3352 2 роки тому +3

      I see it a lot in Utah. And I'm usually in the SouthWest corner since I come from Vegas, and the elevations in St. George aren't all that high to begin with. It's not that much higher than Vegas (about 600 feet higher). Most of the population of Utah lives down in the valleys, not up in the mountains anyways. Salt Lake is about twice my elevation though at 4200 feet. I admit I have used 85 octane before. I didn't know better until this video. It's not really going to hurt anything if you do it once and you aren't driving your vehicle hard. Plus it was mixed with the better gas from my city.

    • @fzr2k840
      @fzr2k840 2 роки тому +1

      @@TriNguyen-nl7qo No, it was a rental

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting 2 роки тому +2

      should have chosen 92 or 95. That's what gas should be. That's what it is pretty much worldwide except in the USA where it's supposedly "premium"...

  • @hogibunz834
    @hogibunz834 2 роки тому +19

    I was literally thinking about this exact concept the other day. Totally needed this video. So good and so informative.

  • @jimdevilbiss9125
    @jimdevilbiss9125 2 роки тому +1

    Another excellent explanation with whiteboard and multicolors. Great for visual learners. Very interesting that a drop of two in the octane rating could do that much damage. As always thank you

  • @surrelljr
    @surrelljr Місяць тому

    Thank you! You finally got me a detailed explanation, I use 87 octane fuel here in my vehicles in 5000+ ft here Wyoming since I started reading that it was recommended for my newer vehicles. It makes sense now, I grew up in the 1970’s with carberation systems and we went with the best combination that gave us maximum performance. Onboard computers on my 1993 and newer vehicles do a lot, with a detailed description I feel better about what I am doing.

  • @kylegreen378
    @kylegreen378 2 роки тому +282

    I like your teaching style, and I'd rather have you teaching my engineering courses than 95% of the profs that I have had. Bravo my good sir

    • @tommartin2360
      @tommartin2360 2 роки тому +2

      Agreed. If my physics and engendering profs used car engines in their examples I might have perked up a bit more in class. just sayin

    • @nealbradleigh5069
      @nealbradleigh5069 2 роки тому +4

      I concur. Can we get this guy cloned and into Public schools asap?

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 2 роки тому +2

      And I can't stand when my teacher spends so much time writing on blackboard or white board. This guy has it done already.

    • @ericolens3
      @ericolens3 2 роки тому +3

      @@nealbradleigh5069
      How many clones?
      There's 50 states with each state having at least 3 major cities each.
      Or are we just closing him for the universities? In short, not if we should clone him, but how many do we make?

    • @super8bitvideos
      @super8bitvideos 2 роки тому +1

      its exactly how professors teach, the only difference is that he's directly in your ear and right in front of your face.

  • @Nonamguys
    @Nonamguys 2 роки тому +9

    I live at over 7000 ft elevation, and have never had my engine knock with 85, but this is good to know and will use higher octane (when I can afford it) going forward!

  • @michaelgriffin1601
    @michaelgriffin1601 Місяць тому +1

    From Denver and been using 85 on all my regularly aspirated regular compression ratio vehicles since forever. Never an issue, but my vehicles dont see anything near sea level. If i was going to take one on a road trip East or something just make sure it has 87 in it and its good, but most road trips involve going up in elevation here anyways so literally not an issue and havent been throwing money away on preventing knock that isnt even close to occurring. His example of the boosted F-150 towing through high elevation and back down again is a good example of what not to do. Living in a city where your elevation from day to day only changes by a few hundred feet on regular commutes then run what is needed based off elevation.

  • @TheCldmstrsn
    @TheCldmstrsn Рік тому +3

    Thank you for this! I live in Salt Lake City and now use Plus (88 octane) instead of the 85 which the dealership said was fine but it really isn't! when I first got my 2022 Outback XT I had 85 and noticed some weird stuff but since I went to the 88 it performs perfectly.

  • @lhurst9550
    @lhurst9550 2 роки тому +180

    Yeah the solution is just don't go down to lower elevations, 'tis spooky there, very weird people.....

  • @doctorscoot
    @doctorscoot 2 роки тому +51

    Have you ever seen one of "Greg's planes and automobiles" videos where he talks about Octane Ratings and manifold boost pressures in WW2 era fighter engines? He goes into tons of technical detail about two stage turbo-supercharging and power outputs at different altitudes...

    • @stevedugas8988
      @stevedugas8988 2 роки тому +12

      Greg's videos are among the most interesting technical posts on the 'net.

    • @doctorscoot
      @doctorscoot 2 роки тому +1

      @@stevedugas8988 yeah i love 'em

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman 2 роки тому +6

      One of the best historical research/engineering channels on youtube by far

    • @SugarBushBoys
      @SugarBushBoys 2 роки тому +8

      Greg explained that US fighters evolved to outperform German fighters due to the availability of higher octane fuel. Manifold pressure was allowed to go higher producing more horsepower.

  • @katieandkevinsears7724
    @katieandkevinsears7724 2 роки тому +38

    I was with my brother in Colorado in 2001 in his 96 Ranger. It was only a 4 cylinder and lost so much power with the elevation, we couldn't do the speed limit. He kept trying the higher octane gas and it did nothing. I told him to try the 85 and we magically got the power back.

    • @rogerdodrill4733
      @rogerdodrill4733 Рік тому +8

      That was magical, higher octane can only make more power if more timing advance without ping,if timing don't advance ,power won't either.

    • @williamjones7821
      @williamjones7821 2 місяці тому +3

      I heard somewhere years ago that much of what they put into gasoline to raise the octane is actually BUTANE, which I think burns LESS WELL than the gasoline it is added to. So higher octane perhaps did not burn as well or have as much power.
      I think this is why motorcycles don't use higher octane -- the gas caps allow fumes to leak out easily, particularly over the hot engine. So butane would leak out, and octane would fall quickly after the fill-up.

    • @keilet
      @keilet Місяць тому +5

      ​@williamjones7821 Incorrect. Butane is a gas at atmosphere. Ethanol is mixed with gasoline to increase octane.

    • @e-curb
      @e-curb Місяць тому +2

      @@williamjones7821 Gas tanks are at the opposite end of the car as the engine. Thus, it doesn't matter how hot the engine gets, the fuel temp in the tank won't change. Besides, all gas caps since 1972 have been sealed.

    • @e-curb
      @e-curb Місяць тому +5

      The reason your brother's truck made less hp with high octane is because its engine is low compression. When you put high octane fuel in a low CR engine, it will make less hp than low octane. There is only one function of high octane: to fuel high compression engines.

  • @rsanchez9865
    @rsanchez9865 2 роки тому +1

    wonderfully explained, thanks for the follow up for Turbo based engines.

  • @damon0559
    @damon0559 2 роки тому +87

    For what its worth I worked in the service department for a chrysler/jeep/ram dealer in colorado (where everyone uses 85) for 6 years and never once had, or heard of, a knock/pre-detonation issue on a non-turbo charged vehicle (most of which specify 91/premium anyway) not related to mechanical failure. I think if the vehicle is staying at altitude without forced induction its unlikely to have any problem. That being said the use of 85 in a turbo charged vehicle was a common problem and I would be surprised any manufacturer would recommend 87 instead of 91 for a turbocharged engine.
    I do think there is confusion by people refueling at high altitude and then returning to lower, and I have heard people (incorrectly) claim that 85 is the same as 87 sold at lower altitude and that the altitude makes them perform differently thus the change in labeling.

    • @Anvarynn
      @Anvarynn 2 роки тому +8

      It's hilarious you said basically everything he did in the last quarter of the video...

    • @PARULES2
      @PARULES2 2 роки тому +1

      @@Anvarynn i know right if only he watched the whole video lol could have saved him the time typing up his message lmfao

    • @Sumanitu
      @Sumanitu 2 роки тому +3

      Both of the commenters to this thead seem to lack some reading comprehension skills. Specifically the OP's second paragraph expressed concern that people might be told that octane ratings might be based on different altitudes, vs what is actually in the gas.

    • @Anvarynn
      @Anvarynn 2 роки тому +2

      @@Sumanitu No I'm very capable of reading, hero

    • @MrBenHaynes
      @MrBenHaynes 2 роки тому +2

      KIA/Hyundai turbocharged vehicles in Australia are recommended to run on AKI87 (Research Octane Number 91).
      Most small capacity turbo petrol vehicles are European in origin and are tuned to run on AKI89 (RON95) at a bare minimum.
      A large proportion of Aussies use a higher rated fuel than manufacturer recommendation (wasting money) in the belief that it causes less wear and has cleaning properties.

  • @NaziHampster
    @NaziHampster 2 роки тому +264

    So the upshot of this is, the car manufactures are covering their backs just in case some smart arse tries to sue them for engine damage due to `incorrect` fuel rating usage at the non specified altitude.
    Very interesting. Fuel for thought. Thanks.

    • @silverfox__12
      @silverfox__12 2 роки тому +6

      And I wonder how well that law suite works when people use diesel in place of gas?

    • @NaziHampster
      @NaziHampster 2 роки тому +17

      @@silverfox__12 Well to be honest, that's just human stupidity.

    • @martyscholes119
      @martyscholes119 2 роки тому +15

      People just know to use regular gas. I grew up in the Rockies and was told that 87 octane fuel at sea level tests at 85 octane here, so they are the same fuel, which I am now learning is incorrect. I would be stunned if manufacturers do not plan for this scenario during testing. High altitude with lower octane is not a new trend.

    • @alxace
      @alxace 2 роки тому +11

      @@martyscholes119
      Clearly manufacturers account for this scenario. That's why there is a warning in the owner's manual and that's why Jason made this video to explain it.

    • @Kandralla
      @Kandralla 2 роки тому +1

      @@NaziHampster I don't know that I'd call accidentally using an incompatible fuel that comes from the same pump with the same looking handle stupidity. It's basically the same human factors fail as selling 85 octane as "regular" and not something distinct.

  • @wallybrown9509
    @wallybrown9509 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the in-depth explanation sir.

  • @junk3386
    @junk3386 11 місяців тому +1

    Wow, what a great video with so much research put into it!!!

  • @eriks2962
    @eriks2962 2 роки тому +5

    Man! That was great. I am a computer scientist with no interest in working on cars. But your presentations are so good and so clear, that I really want to see them!

  • @RickJohnson
    @RickJohnson 2 роки тому +27

    11:43 - Not too much different from the early 1980s and before when regular (leaded) gas at 88 octane was available, but you weren't supposed to use it in cars with catalytic converts that *required* unleaded fuel. When they phased lead out, ARCO and other stations sold an EC-Regular with a lead substitute to satisfy the requirements of these engines until the gas was phased out entirely.
    Just because it's sold doesn't mean you should use it, but today (and in the past), nozzle sizes differed enough to attempt to coerce drivers into using the right fuel by making the wrong nozzle impossible to use in the wrong tank.

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh 2 роки тому

      When I was young a century ago, we could go to a service station and buy white gas. Now you really have to look to find it. My neighbor uses it in the engines he repairs and operates but he has to go to the airport to buy it.

  • @egresk1
    @egresk1 2 роки тому +69

    Very interesting. My wife and I just did a 6500 mile road trip from the Midwest to the West Coast. I was wondering why so many stations had 85 octane fuel. We were driving her Turbo Chevy Trax and we always use at least 88 octane fuel. The Norms back home are 87, 89, 91. Out west it was 85, 88, 91. Thanks for the easy to understand explanation.

    • @chrishansen2409
      @chrishansen2409 2 роки тому +1

      Oregon and Washington are mostly 87 as a minimum, I don’t know about the east side of the states though

    • @JoshuaPlays99
      @JoshuaPlays99 2 роки тому +6

      In California its typically 87,89,91. You usually only find 85 in high altitude areas, especially places like utah.

    • @csn6234
      @csn6234 2 роки тому +12

      Your problem isn't the fuel. It's your car. Speaking as a former Chevy Cruze owner.

    • @lexithelexus7377
      @lexithelexus7377 2 роки тому

      Yep moving to diffrent states i saw it too

    • @coyotepeyote
      @coyotepeyote 2 роки тому +2

      @@JoshuaPlays99 Yep i'm in Utah and 85 is all over the place, i use it for everything but my car (lawnmowers etc).

  • @jamesglass5402
    @jamesglass5402 Місяць тому

    When I was younger engines that I had or built myself had 10.5 to 12.0 would seldom run on the regular gas would knock terribly so they would only run on what was called premium or Ethyl gas. I understand why you need to explain this to people that don’t have that experience. This was a very good explanation. Both of the current cars that claim that they will ok with E-85 but I have never used it.

  • @markjwems1
    @markjwems1 2 роки тому +51

    This is a fantastic video with a great lesson. I have explained this concept to others several times in the past, although not quite as deftly. However, I always include an explanation of octane vs. heptane (ie. the influence that the number of carbons on the molecule chain has on ignition temperature/ignition pressures). A basic description of petroleum refining processes can be helpful. I wonder if you would be interested in creating content that addresses that part of the subject.

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner 2 роки тому +5

      there is your problem, people's eyes glaze over when you get into octane, heptane, cetane, propane, butane, etc. they hear charlie brown noises......

    • @hawkertyphoon4537
      @hawkertyphoon4537 11 місяців тому

      Good idea!
      Send EE to a refinery and cover the important bits for us Petrolheads.

  • @michaelblacktree
    @michaelblacktree 2 роки тому +11

    I remember seeing 85 octane at many gas stations, during road trips out west. I always wondered about that. Thanks for the info! 👍

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 2 роки тому

      @Engineering EхpIαined🌟 Scam alert!

    • @javaman2883
      @javaman2883 2 роки тому

      AS pre 1990 cars get less common, the 85 octane gas should be disappearing for good.

    • @forumtyish
      @forumtyish 2 роки тому +1

      It's interesting because for I think 2020 or maybe 2019, whatever the most recent year's data has been reported, the US DOT says the average age of a vehicle in the US is something like high 11.x years, nearly 12. It was less in past years, very slowly increasing over time, but still it would suggest that we have long since passed the time when any reasonable person should expect a pre 1990 car to be even remotely "common" and thus there being a justification for such fuel - And keep in mind this video uses 1987, per the referenced study, as a modern engine that didn't really benefit from such fuel. So I don't think it should have been allowed for even the last decade or two.

    • @lexithelexus7377
      @lexithelexus7377 2 роки тому

      Yep moving to diffrent states i saw it too

    • @rogerdodrill4733
      @rogerdodrill4733 Рік тому

      @@javaman2883 not from high locals

  • @johnfrancis0063
    @johnfrancis0063 Місяць тому

    1976 Cadillac DeVille. 501cid engine with the QuadraJet carb. Lived on the east coast flatlands but occasionally went up to the Appalachian Highlands so I had to change the jets in the carb around 4000ft ASL. I became an expert rebuilder on those carbs.

  • @marko7843
    @marko7843 2 місяці тому

    4:05 is right on, and reminds me of driving to Lake Tahoe as a kid. We had the last high compression Lincoln, which ran on 94+ octane leaded premium in the Bay Area. When refueling part way up Donner, though, Dad would use regular 88 octane. Coming back down he would switch back to premium...

  • @NathanKrick
    @NathanKrick 2 роки тому +14

    I recently drove from Arizona to Indiana and back. I passed through 2 states (or at least areas) that used 85 octane (New Mexico and the Texas panhandle). The car I was driving clearly says that a minimum 87 octane is required in the manual, and on the gas cap. I ended up using 87 in Texas (the midgrade at that station) and 88 in New Mexico since that was the midgrade in NM.
    Unfortunately, 85 octane doesn't seem to be cheaper than 87 anymore since the 85 that I didn't buy in NM and TX was similarly priced to the 87 everywhere else. If 85 is cheaper, than the gas companies are just pocketing the profits.

    • @cliffordsquire2333
      @cliffordsquire2333 2 роки тому

      The gas companies are lining their pockets which is a big part of the reason gas is so high that and no one want's to stand up to them since who's in office now.

    • @jeremyswalley8625
      @jeremyswalley8625 Рік тому +1

      Well use mid grade

    • @mikej238
      @mikej238 11 місяців тому

      Prices vary because of state taxes not refinery. Liberal state = higher gas tax

    • @anonymousperson2886
      @anonymousperson2886 Місяць тому

      Are you calling Texas liberal?

  • @thewtfr
    @thewtfr 2 роки тому +60

    I've lived in Colorado my whole life and have been using 85 for every car I've ever owned except my turbo subaru without any problems. Most people here seem to use 85 unless their car requires at least mid grade

    • @trevorsmith4597
      @trevorsmith4597 2 роки тому +7

      Yeah. I think this video is aimed at people who live at sea level. I’ve never had issues either. Truck runs great

    • @IronicallySarcastic
      @IronicallySarcastic 2 роки тому +2

      What happened with the Subie? Did it have issues or you simply put higher octane fuel in it?

    • @stevk5181
      @stevk5181 2 роки тому +2

      My "old" truck ('02 😅) doesn't specifically state to not use 85 octane rating fuel. However my 2010 Focus does, and states lower than 87 octane could damage the engine. So the truck gets 85 "regular" and the car gets 87 "midgrade".

    • @tybick12
      @tybick12 2 роки тому +5

      @@IronicallySarcastic forced induction engines generally require higher octane fuels than naturally aspirated engines do. Most recommend 91 or higher

    • @onomatopoeia162003
      @onomatopoeia162003 2 роки тому

      There are some that only take E-85.

  • @solatle9887
    @solatle9887 Рік тому +1

    Wow, valuable information. Thank you!

  • @eriknervik9003
    @eriknervik9003 Рік тому +1

    Years ago I took a road trip from Washington state to the Midwest and driving from Idaho to Utah I refilled my tank with “regular” fuel that was 85, I noted the 85 and thought it was wierd but I got it and kept driving. An hour later a warning light for the emissions control system lit up on my dash, I had never seen that light before or after come on, an hour later I got to the next truck stop and topped off with premium (91) the light went off and since then I now make sure to pay attention to that when I’m taking a road trip

  • @coleroyce
    @coleroyce 2 роки тому +10

    Good info, I live in Wyoming at 7,200’ elevation and about 14 years ago when I moved here I was concerned and confused about all reg gas here being 85, then 89, no 87. I have a 2011 f150 eco boost and have been putting the 85 in for 10 years. You have me second guessing changing to the 89 in the future. Thanks for sharing.

    • @dylanc2806
      @dylanc2806 2 роки тому +4

      if youve been putting 85 in it for 10 years and havent had any issue i wouldnt bother

    • @coleroyce
      @coleroyce 2 роки тому +8

      @@dylanc2806 I agree. I still use 85 for that reason. I do upgrade if I’m on a trip at lower elevation though.

    • @pipertripp
      @pipertripp 2 роки тому +5

      I’ve been in Denver for 20 years and have used 85 the entire time. Have never had nor heard of anyone having issues. I’m also not asking around but seems like I would have heard something by now.

  • @seanmoore10
    @seanmoore10 2 роки тому +279

    Remember, “modern” in this case of using 87 over 85, even in higher elevations, are cars built in 1987. Essentially, 85 should no longer be produced.

    • @richfarfugnuven6308
      @richfarfugnuven6308 2 роки тому +42

      87 is mid-grade here in CO and it's like $4 a gallon. What a rip-off.

    • @rons5319
      @rons5319 2 роки тому +9

      I see this all over Wyoming, and they sell it for a pretty high price there. Of course, that is the price they display. Then you pull in and see 87 octane is 30 cents more.

    • @jackterry7664
      @jackterry7664 2 роки тому +3

      Ha! i never see 91 octane at the pumps! And i'm suppose to use it in my vehicle. usuall it's 87 octane in the premium pumps! And this is low level Ca.

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 2 роки тому +14

      @@jackterry7664 In California's hottest areas, they might as well sell 110 octane racing gas as "regular gas".

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 2 роки тому +19

      I don't put anything less than 91 (all my bikes and cars require it). 85 seems like a joke to keep around

  • @teirvin
    @teirvin 11 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for the explanation! Really helpful.
    On a related note, do you have any videos covering HP loss at elevation in turbo vs NA engines?

  • @Less1leg2
    @Less1leg2 2 роки тому

    one of the best video's dealing with Cars, Trucks, and any engine. Wonderfully presented and easy to understand.
    Now, why is Premium Fuels being charged to consumers with outrageously escalated pricing?

  • @SteventheGrey
    @SteventheGrey 2 роки тому +9

    In addition to the turbo engine and being used to tow, F150 is also available with a 36 gallon fuel tank, increasing the odds that you'll end up at a lower elevation with 85 octane gas.

  • @cnorton1us
    @cnorton1us 2 роки тому +19

    I've lived in the Northeast US/New England since I was 3, where regular gas is 87 octane and premium is usually 92 or 93. I remember the first time I took a road trip to Colorado and saw that 85 fuel. Although it was cheaper, I stuck to the 87 considering there was a sticker right on the fuel door stating that was the minimum. Even though I was sure one or two tanks of that wouldn't destroy my engine, it just didn't seem worth it. Especially considering how much the power was down anyway due to the thin air.

  • @walt1955
    @walt1955 15 днів тому

    I had a rental car in Quito, Ecuador in 2008 (Quito elevation in meters: 2,850m. • Quito elevation in feet: 9,350ft). All the gas was 80 octane which I had never seen before. I did not hear any knocking coming from the engine, but I was glad it was a rental.

  • @frodemarkhus3692
    @frodemarkhus3692 Рік тому

    Thank you. You always have good explanations for complicated things.And you explain so that we can understand the context.🤗

  • @jeffhidalgo6037
    @jeffhidalgo6037 2 роки тому +6

    I don't like how gas stations attempt to market 93 octane as better for your engine when the truth is that you want the lowest possible octane that doesn't cause knock since a higher octane will mean less of the fuel is ignited. You'll get better gas mileage, more power and better emissions with the lower octane as long as there's no early detonation (knock) occurring. Great video to help people understand!

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  2 роки тому +5

      Careful! It's often not needed, but higher octane doesn't mean you'll ignite less of the fuel. It will all still burn, it's just excessive in that you never get near knock, so you're paying for and advantage you don't see. Explained in more detail in the pinned comment.

    • @kc9scott
      @kc9scott 2 роки тому +1

      I believe the ignition / flame propagation happens more slowly with higher-octane fuel. If you use excessively-high octane fuel without correspondingly advancing the timing, it will all ignite, but if the combustion is slower, it could happen late enough in the cycle that you won’t get as much crankshaft torque, and some of it might still be burning when the exhaust valve opens.

    • @TechnicalLee
      @TechnicalLee 2 роки тому

      This isn't really true anymore, modern engines use timing adaptability to adjust to the octane of the fuel being used to extract the maximum amount of power and efficiency (they run just under knock threshold). For example, Ford EcoBoost engines only require 87 octane minimum, but will develop more horsepower and efficiency on 93 because the timing can adjust to take advantage of the higher octane. Horsepower ratings are also done with 93 octane not 87. What you said might have been more correct 15+ years ago before engines had the technology to adjust to knock threshold.

    • @DragonKnightX12
      @DragonKnightX12 2 роки тому

      The only recommendation that has ever mattered is the one from the manufacturer. Yea it's a waste on a something like a Honda Civic, but just Lee said.
      If a Engines recommends higher grade fuel, you're going to lose all around efficiency by going lower. Less power, worse gas millage, and honestly there's always gonna be a higher potential for knock. Specially depending on the specific engine.
      I always try to stick with the recommended fuel.

    • @-nightraider-1169
      @-nightraider-1169 2 роки тому

      Not if your car is tuned to run best on higher octane gas. I get more gas mileage, more power and a much smoother driving car on higher octane gas then regular.

  • @stevet6676
    @stevet6676 2 роки тому +13

    I live in Colorado, and we have 85 octane everywhere. I own a 2019 Subaru (non turbo) and the owners manual states something similar. The oil companies / gas stations often rip off customers by charging more for 87 octane than they should. When I fill up, I fill half the tank with 85, then the next half with 91. I end up with a tank of 88 for the same or less cost than 87. 85 should be banned.

    • @crissd8283
      @crissd8283 2 роки тому +2

      I really think banning it is extreme. If the people stop buying it then stations will stop selling it. I put it in any non turbo charged vehicle when at elevation. Modern cars have knock sensors and will protect themselves.

  • @lilsammywasapunkrock
    @lilsammywasapunkrock 2 роки тому +7

    I'd really like to see a video on ethonal blended fuels.
    I drive an "older" fuel injected car, and I live at a higher elevation. It's a 86 v-8. When we converted over to ethonal fuels, I lost power and economy. But we also gained equivalent "octane" rating by using the ethonal.
    To get some of the power and gas mileage back, I actually bump my base timing up quite a bit. Base timing is 10° and I can usually get up to 16 or 17° without any knocking or issues. Even though it's old, it still has computer controlled timing, but it's also really low compression at about 8.5:1.
    Now on a newer car with variable valve timing, I still don't see an issue, as the electronics should be smart enough to detect any sort of knock and pull back timing. On a turbo charger car, the argument against lower octane fuels makes perfect sense, because they artificially raise combustion pressures and essentially negate the losses from elevation.
    Personally, the best mileage I get is on non-ethonal low grade fuel. I usually get the same, or even worse on premium.
    I used to drive 100 miles round trip 5 days a week, and this was around the same time that we started switching over to ethonal in my state. I routinely got a 7% dip in gas mileage whenever filling up with "e10", so I would avoid those until they were all gone.
    Since my drive was 50 miles almost exactly each way, I had a 22 gallon gas tank and often averaged around 30 mpg if I was careful. I would routinely get right around 600 miles to a tank. I did all sorts of things with my driving habits to try to maintain or beat that 600 mile range. My personal record ended up being 652 miles averaging about 35 mpg on a full tank. But that was being really careful and trying to do 55mph on the highway.
    Messing with it, I could easily maintain 70mph all day long using cruise control and still get 30mpg. I decided after doing the math that I would rather save the 20 minutes a day then save the $3 dollars a week and kinda gave up on maximizing millage.
    Oh, and incase you were wondering, it's usually not worth it to run non-ethonal fuel. It's usually between 10 to 25% more expensive, and at most you will only gain 7% difference, so cost wise it's pointless.

    • @alflyover4413
      @alflyover4413 Рік тому

      That depends very much on the vehicle. OBDI autos gave me 30% less mileage on E10, compared to ethanol-free, as well as soot in the tailpipe, so they were burning more fuel. For a OBDII car you are right, but I am using E0 in my older OBDII because it isn't rated for E15 (now the gasohol standard by government mandate).

    • @drunvert
      @drunvert 11 місяців тому

      Ethanol has less energy v gasoline.
      So it fixes knock but you need more of it.

    • @Knirin
      @Knirin 2 місяці тому

      My brother’s 2013 Chevy Silverado gets about 10% better fuel economy using E15 than E0. No idea why.

  • @petarkrivitsky4436
    @petarkrivitsky4436 Рік тому +1

    Could you please make an informative video about LPG fuel for us people in Europe as we use it more? It would be awesome as there is not too many videos explaining how it works. Thank you for your great content!

  • @jeremiahrex
    @jeremiahrex 2 роки тому +279

    “It’s bonkers” + “it’s cheaper” = welcome to America, making life difficult for engineers.

    • @AliceC993
      @AliceC993 2 роки тому +5

      @Engineering EхpIαined🌟 Reported for impersonation

    • @bmw128racer
      @bmw128racer 2 роки тому +4

      My thoughts exactly. Only in America.

    • @Clearanceman2
      @Clearanceman2 2 роки тому +5

      People assume the government wants to help us.

    • @jeremiahrex
      @jeremiahrex 2 роки тому +9

      Based on the document he read it seems pretty clear the government does want to get rid of 85 octane but is probably not allowed to by lobbyists. Yes, they do want to help us.

    • @Clearanceman2
      @Clearanceman2 2 роки тому +6

      @@jeremiahrex they definitely don't. They are giving covid vaccines to kids. If you bother to look up the stats, the last year the severity rate of covid in the world has been about .5%. The death rate has been steady 2%. Almost all severe cases and deaths are people over 50. You cannot convince me that kids need vaccines for covid. Not to mention, in other countries a covid "passport" can be a current negative covid test, proof of vaccination or proof of surviving covid. Here it has to be proof of vaccination. I could go on for hours about all the cases where requirements on many things aren't helpful but just designed to generate revenue.

  • @mikebell2750
    @mikebell2750 2 роки тому +34

    85 octane was fine back 70 years ago when some of the old cars had 7:1 compression ratios and would run on almost anything that would ignite. It should be discontinued now as it is pretty much useless for most modern vehicles.

    • @DxCBuG
      @DxCBuG 2 роки тому +4

      @@zacharyreynolds4303 higher octane fuel is not more expensive to make than low octane fuel. This is all synthetically done in a refinery. The price gauging for higher octane is literally marketing

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 2 роки тому +1

      @Engineering EхpIαined🌟 Scam alert!

  • @hawkertyphoon4537
    @hawkertyphoon4537 11 місяців тому

    Short, educational and to the point.
    Useful knowledge for any driver, wether an enthousiast or not.

  • @tomdillan
    @tomdillan 2 роки тому +2

    When I lived in northern Utah they sold 85 and misses asked me why I didn’t use it because it was cheaper. I had read my car manual and it stated no lower than 87 octane. All the gas stations were 85, 89 then 91 octane fuel.

  • @jasonkalihi5603
    @jasonkalihi5603 2 роки тому +21

    It's kinda like when I first started driving back in the 90's, and leaded fuel was still readily available, even though really no cars produced since the 70's were able to run leaded fuel.

    • @lrich8181
      @lrich8181 2 роки тому +2

      1975 was when unleaded was required in cars in the US.

    • @LA_Commander
      @LA_Commander 2 роки тому +1

      My mom bought a 1979 Honda specifically because it was the last year that model could run on leaded gas. Starting in 1980 it was unleaded.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom 2 роки тому +1

      @@LA_Commander your mum wanted to put lead in the air?

    • @LA_Commander
      @LA_Commander 2 роки тому +11

      @@DrWhom yeah and she ate babies and pulled the wings off bees too, are you happy now?

    • @carrtb
      @carrtb 2 роки тому +1

      @@LA_Commander I love this. I did EXACTLY the same thing but with a different make. The 1980 vehicles were out toward the end of ‘79 but I opted for one of the two remaining ‘79s. They didn’t have a catalytic converter (or any other emissions control device) either. It was a sad day a few years later as the powers that be took away the leaded gas pumps, Union 76 was the last bastion with their Leaded Supreme.

  • @whiskeytangofoxtrot3572
    @whiskeytangofoxtrot3572 2 роки тому +25

    Good stuff as always.
    Any chance you’ll do a video on sealed transmissions thereby making it difficult to replace transmission fluid?

    • @anthonyschiano9144
      @anthonyschiano9144 2 роки тому +4

      Would love to see this. Such a highly debated topic amongst mechanics

    • @njsongwriter
      @njsongwriter 2 роки тому

      There are numerous videos covering that subject.

    • @Persocondes
      @Persocondes 2 роки тому

      they made it difficult to prevent owners from changing the fluid at home because of the multiple steps of properly checking fluid level. The older vehicles with the ATF dip stick with COLD and HOT lines are meant to be checked with vehicle idling in Park gear and fluid temperature above 104 F degrees but under 128 F degrees(specific temp depending on manufacture, this is for my 2008 lexus LS460). the HOT line is when you waited too long and vehicle idled too long that ATF temperature is above 128 F degrees. Which is why modern vehicles have a fluid level check where the onboard temperature sensor tells you when you are in the proper fluid temperature for level check, and then you pull the "drain" bolt to see if fluid thinly streams out, if nothing streams out it's low, if it's gushing out, it's high. ATF fluid is a hydraulic fluid and will expand with heat.

    • @rogerdodrill4733
      @rogerdodrill4733 Рік тому

      @@Persocondes I heard manufacturers did it cause idiots checked cold, saw low added fluid caused leaks cause overfull.leaks made shortage & burnt trans.out

  • @joeldavis5815
    @joeldavis5815 2 роки тому +48

    I've lived in Colorado and Utah for years, have always used 85 octane in my cars, and have never experienced any problems. Never had a car die yet at under 170K miles.

    • @jman0870
      @jman0870 2 роки тому +9

      If your vehicles are dying before 200k it literally may have something to do with it. All modern vehicles (since the advent of fuel injection) should last 200k minimum unless there were major design flaws or they sat for extended amounts of time

    • @joeldavis5815
      @joeldavis5815 2 роки тому +2

      @@jman0870 Hey it's one of those UA-cam comment section know-it-alls. Well, in my defense, I didn't want to make the number of miles that my cars generally last a higher number on average lest some other jerks make comments accusing me of lying. But yeah, these days a properly maintained vehicle should last at least 200K.

    • @jman0870
      @jman0870 2 роки тому +9

      @@joeldavis5815 hey look! It’s one of those say one thing, mean something completely different internet tough guys. You specifically said none of your cars made it past 170k miles before they died. Reading and writing not one of your stronger abilities?

    • @joeldavis5815
      @joeldavis5815 2 роки тому +4

      @@jman0870So what is this? You get off of trolling UA-cam looking for people to argue with. Get a life dude. No replying to you anymore...

    • @jman0870
      @jman0870 2 роки тому +3

      @@joeldavis5815 umadbro?

  • @andrewallen9993
    @andrewallen9993 2 роки тому +1

    My VW splittie will Run happily on 77 octane and it's older brothers on 70. A 7:1 compression ratio or less and manually adjustable ignition timing helps!

  • @SuperDerfmaster
    @SuperDerfmaster 2 роки тому +12

    I always wondered about the 85 octane gasoline, when I was in the mountains. My owners manual recommended minimum 87, so I stuck with it. Now I'm glad I did.

  • @boost331
    @boost331 2 роки тому +4

    Cant say I have ever seen this type of fuel. I do however regularly use E15 which has an 88 octane rating. It is cheaper per gallon than 87 and has more ethanol to burn cleaner. There is a very slight loss of MPG as expected with the higher ethanol content, but I only notice that durning city driving. With majority highway use my MPG stays the same as when using 87.

  • @eaglescout1984
    @eaglescout1984 2 місяці тому +1

    I mean, there really is just a handful of instances where the sale of a product being outlawed in the US (and/or individual states) and most of those were for health and safety reasons. In fact, you can go to any big box home improvement store, and they have multiple items for sale that violate building codes. And it's because we tend to adopt the practice of "caveat emptor" in this country.

  • @racineg33
    @racineg33 2 роки тому

    OMG WOW! This is why I sub to this channel. Thank you so much for the info. I'm switching fuel now!

  • @oldman-zr2ru
    @oldman-zr2ru 2 роки тому +14

    I live at 6000 ft. and have used 85 octane for decades. I still have my 92 F 150 with 240,000 on it and it does just fine. My 99 Yukon and 99 Cherokee, same thing.

    • @paulo123-
      @paulo123- 2 місяці тому +1

      Do you drive like an old man on Sundays? My guess is yes

    • @oldman-zr2ru
      @oldman-zr2ru 2 місяці тому

      @@paulo123- You can't drive fast here anymore thanks to all of the Commiefornians that have moved here.

    • @sungear
      @sungear 2 місяці тому

      Surprising how many dummies can watch this explanation and still think that every car needs high octane fuel.

  • @SSChambers1
    @SSChambers1 2 роки тому +8

    I still occasionally get significant knock with Shell/BP 93 octane here in Ohio from various stations, pulling timing as much as 12°. The same brand/octane fuel on a trip down south resulted in 0 knock. I swear, Ohio has diluted horse piss as fuel.

  • @alana1670
    @alana1670 2 роки тому +2

    Really well explained.
    Living in New Zealand I'm amazed to see you can get 85 in the US. Here we only have 91, 95 or 98.

    • @danc2014
      @danc2014 2 роки тому +4

      97 octane “super unleaded” in some places is roughly equivalent to 91 octane premium in the United States. RON vs average of the RON and the MON figures

  • @bobketcheson3350
    @bobketcheson3350 2 роки тому

    Great explanation! Thanks so much for the video.

  • @michaelhess4825
    @michaelhess4825 2 роки тому +12

    Over 25 years of driving a dozen vehicles at 5k or higher (I live in Wyoming) 85 octane has never been an issue. Knock sensors prevent damage. And the hundreds of thousands of vehicles at this altitude doing the same thing, is pretty good evidence it just doesn't matter.
    When I tow with my hemi, or fill my fiesta st, I do use 87. My BRZ gets 85 then 87 at alternating tank fills, never dropping past half.

    • @javaman2883
      @javaman2883 2 роки тому +2

      All the vehicles running on it is not evidence that 85 octane doesn't matter, it's evidence that the electronic systems are trying to deal with it. That results in decreases performance from your car, lower fuel mileage, and possibly shorter lifespan of certain parts.

    • @theBear89451
      @theBear89451 2 роки тому +1

      @@javaman2883 Like everything in life, it is about tradeoffs. Saving money is worth the reduction in power and engine life for most people.

    • @alexurban8630
      @alexurban8630 2 роки тому

      My 2001 Wrangler's owners manual states 85 is the manufacturer recommended gas so I'll keep using it with no concern

  • @LionRunner
    @LionRunner 2 роки тому +9

    Sadly here are the comments when I share this video in a FB group here in Colorado-
    User 1 - Toyota told me 85 is fine here and I'm in a 2017 - same everything as your 21. I never noticed a difference anywhere other than my bank account so I run 85 🤷
    User 2 - I live in the Springs and been using 85 in all my vehicles for 25 years without any issues. I occasionally use a fuel cleaner, but that's all. No know issues with my new or used vehicles. My elevation is 6000 ft.
    User 3 - 85 for life! I’ve never noticed a difference when I run 85 or 91.
    User 4 - I'm in a 98 4runner, so maybe the age is the reason but I've compared 85, 87, and 91 up at ~6k-8k feet where I drive and haven't found any difference.
    User 5 - 85 is all I pump at 8,000 ft elevation in Colorado. Pumped 85 in my 4.7 sequoia my 4.0 4Runner and the 5.7 in the lc
    User 6 - I run 85 in high elevations. Anything higher in a low compression engine is just throwing money out the window for a placebo effect.
    Many more comments like this..

    • @bensinor4974
      @bensinor4974 2 роки тому +4

      That's because it is fine. He lightly touched on it but the crux of the video should have been that they are lying to you. Basically all modern vehicles have knock sensors. Meaning if you start knocking for any reason then the ecu will pull timing and that's it. So you are fine to run 85. Just in some vehicles you will lose power. The notice in the manuals is a cover their ass sort of thing. They don't want to be blamed if that stars align and either the ecu fails to save itself (which should be their problem) or if somehow you put low enough octane in to cause damage with knocking before the ecu can stop it or low enough that the ecu can't pull enough timing to stop it.
      85 IS FINE IN MODERN VEHICLES. Seriously. They are smart enough to run on it. You really think they are going to build a car that could blow up if someone forgets and fills up with 85? No that would be silly. Because people willfully and accidentally do it all the time.

    • @thelastgood1forever
      @thelastgood1forever 2 роки тому

      This needs to be the top comment.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom 2 роки тому

      @@bensinor4974 you should see what the Russians put in their cars - I don't know exactly what it is, but it smells like vegetable oil

  • @ralph332
    @ralph332 2 роки тому

    Love your videos. Great explanation.

  • @JustBen81
    @JustBen81 2 роки тому +3

    I still found this very informative even though the lowest octane level gas sold where I live is 95 octane. They stopped selling 91 octane gas over 10 years ago.

    • @waycoolscootaloo
      @waycoolscootaloo Рік тому +2

      Yeah, just to drive profits. Most countries have 91 octane still. Most cars are designed for 91 globally. (91 Ron = US 87 octane)

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 2 роки тому +3

    3:00 This is why super/turbo chargers are so effective in piston engine airplanes. *AND* why airplanes need higher octane fuel. Av gas is typically 100 octane.
    Just before WWII an American company found a way to make very high octane fuel and so were able to use much higher compression and get more power at higher altitude.

  • @willk4031
    @willk4031 2 роки тому +9

    * Higher manifold vacuum at full throttle on old cars, not pressure (hence the vacuum advance on a mechanical distributor)

    • @charliemason4355
      @charliemason4355 2 роки тому +3

      I had a 1961 Rambler American Classic, inline 6 with 127 hp. The windshield wipers were driven off the intake manifold vacuum. Real fun when you're entering the highway at night in the rain and floor it. The wipers nearly stop.

    • @johnl3487
      @johnl3487 2 роки тому +1

      The real term is maniford pressure. The pressure is measured from a total vacuum. This is the only way to get the same number regaardless of the elavation of the car. At full throttle the "vacuum" would be less or nonexistant.

    • @davewinter2688
      @davewinter2688 2 роки тому

      You are correct! I noticed that error too. That's a good reason for a vacuum gauge on an older carbureted vehicle. See my comment on the subject including my reference to the knock sensor which is essentially a microphone. Some might call it a transducer.

    • @timdryden3778
      @timdryden3778 2 роки тому

      @@davewinter2688 some might call it a crystal that when vibrated, produces a voltage, to the ecu which alters spark timing, to compensate.

  • @Pip2andahalf
    @Pip2andahalf 2 місяці тому

    Man. So I live at 6,300 feet. I put the highest octane available in my 2006 Subaru WRX which is 91 octane. I’d love to put 93 but it’s simply not available. What is the solution? Is octane booster something to consider? It might be worthy of note that the engine has 290,000 miles on it and has done reasonably well on this fuel its entire life.
    Incidentally I’ve had a head gasket failure but I doubt that is related.
    Your videos are WONDERFUL. Been following a long time. I always enjoy your videos and I learn a lot! thank you!

  • @GalenlevyPhoto
    @GalenlevyPhoto Місяць тому

    I knew about that for a long time. When I lived at around 4,700 ft elevation and they offered 85, 88 and 91. So I used 88 because my car recommended 86 and up octane in the owner manual and never had issues since.

  • @nobodytoyou4887
    @nobodytoyou4887 2 роки тому +39

    Glad to have learned this, here in CO they sell 85 octane, thought it was just normal because of the higher elevation , good thing my GMC is naturally aspirated and doesn't leave that elevation much.

    • @shauncore808
      @shauncore808 2 роки тому

      Same here with my NA V6 Colorado living out in Salida. I just looked in the manual and it says using under 87 can actually hurt the gas mileage. I've been averaging around 20 mpg since I got out here and just kind of figured that's what it is. Now I'm wondering if that's just because I've been using 85...

    • @dan.r9220
      @dan.r9220 2 роки тому

      I moved out here from MN and never even thought about it when I just grabbed the lowest one from the pump. I looked after watching this and my local station has 87 but jts 0.20 more than 85. I can't believe it's that much cheaper than 87.

    • @Fattts
      @Fattts 2 роки тому +1

      Just drop an octane booster in for safety when you come down towards sea level and you'll be good

    • @imoffendedthatyouareoffended
      @imoffendedthatyouareoffended 2 роки тому

      I also live in colorado, I have a turbo’d car. It’s really not much of an issue. My car typically knocks if I’m running my ac or my heater. I’m tuned and still it’s been solid.

    • @dan.r9220
      @dan.r9220 2 роки тому +5

      @@imoffendedthatyouareoffended your running 85 in a turbo car?!?!?!?? Who would tune your car for 85??

  • @nickmunoz2586
    @nickmunoz2586 2 роки тому +13

    Manufacturer:
    “Using this gas will void your warranty”
    Me:
    laughs in pure corn juice

    • @tanman7879
      @tanman7879 2 роки тому +4

      I take it you have a race car you run ethanol in.

    • @Mike_Rogge
      @Mike_Rogge 2 роки тому +3

      Is it doritos?

    • @tankingwithtigers136
      @tankingwithtigers136 2 роки тому

      E100 is like $9 a gallon. That's gotta hurt. E85 is plenty clean for a street car.

  • @steveesposito
    @steveesposito Місяць тому

    IIRC, the Sunoco stations in Fairfax County, VA sold 85 in the 1990s when I lived there.

  • @asusjackson9286
    @asusjackson9286 Рік тому

    Incredible video. Great explanation!!

  • @GlenTheGuesser
    @GlenTheGuesser 2 роки тому +40

    EE = Engineering Explained and EE = Educational and Excellent!

    • @calholli
      @calholli 2 роки тому +2

      EE = Elongated Eggplant

    • @GlenTheGuesser
      @GlenTheGuesser 2 роки тому

      @Brian Rosa That worked! First win today. Let's Go Giants!!!

  • @idiocracy9530
    @idiocracy9530 2 роки тому +5

    I didn't know octane levels that low even existed. Octane 92 was the lowest you could get around here, but was discontinued in 2018 and now octane 95 is the lowest you can get.

    • @119beaker
      @119beaker 2 роки тому +9

      Your country uses a different system (RON) than the US (AKI) which is 4-6 point lower for the same fuel

    • @snekkel
      @snekkel 2 роки тому

      @@119beaker hmm i never knew that

    • @extrastuff9463
      @extrastuff9463 2 роки тому +1

      @@119beaker The video even had a hint for it at 1:24 when he brought up numbers and I remember him bringing it up more explicitly in past videos.

  • @HeathenRides
    @HeathenRides 2 роки тому

    Thanks This was informative very interesting well explained without being boring. I don't have a car i been driving 50cc moped's which I usaly takes to a mechanic to get around 10hp (8,6 in my last one) and I usually used mmt octane higthener which increase the octane by 8points which I mixed with 99 octane gasoline making it go on 107 octane which makes it sound very healthy and respond very good. People told me that it dryes out the cylinder but I never had a cylinder problem (separate oil tank) anyways I don't think I seen 85 octane since the mid 90s or something but I'm Norwegian i Think the lowest octane here is 87 or something most people use the 95 octane that is the regular ..i usaly use the vpower 99

  • @raymondwest1973
    @raymondwest1973 2 роки тому +19

    I live in Salt Lake (approximately 4,500 ft. elevations). I used to used 91 octane fuel thinking I was doing a good thing for my car. After I plugged up the second catalytic converter, it was explained to me why using premium at this altitude is not only not beneficial, but can also be harmful. I my engine could not burn the higher octane completely. So, I was putting incompletely burned fuel out the exhaust. I switched to 85 octane and have never had any problems.

    • @mikej238
      @mikej238 11 місяців тому +1

      just use 88,

    • @shackti1699
      @shackti1699 9 місяців тому +5

      I'm in Utah as well, and have had no issues running 85. We live at high altitude, so it's just fine due to the lower oxygen levels here.
      Now, if you ran 85 octane at sea level, you might have some issues.

    • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 8 місяців тому +5

      Use what is recommended by the manufacturer. Running slightly lower octane probably won't cause knock, but could. Running higher octane probably won't foul a cat, but could. Running higher octane than recommended will never provide any benefit under any circumstance with the possible (possible, not likely) exception of towing near a truck's capacity up a steep hill for a prolonged time.

    • @rah4822
      @rah4822 2 місяці тому

      Have lived and driven in higher altitude states for over 30 years and always burned 85, no knock, no engine problems. When I drive down to lower elevations I always fill up with 87. The real irritation is 85 is priced the same as 87 at lower elevations.

    • @natejohnson5393
      @natejohnson5393 2 місяці тому +1

      @@rightwingsafetysquad9872I live in Utah and have been using 85 octane for 10 years, never had any knock or engine issues

  • @thomaskendrick2221
    @thomaskendrick2221 2 роки тому +25

    ~7:00...."New engines can compensate for this (altitude), because they have EFI and they have electronic ignition timing, so you can maximize horse power and you can maximize efficiency and you can minimize knock by playing with your exact a/f ratio and by playing with your ignition timing"
    As someone who lives at and drag races at high elevation, I can assure anyone, that no matter the A/F ratio fiddling, no matter the Ignition timing tweaking by any ECM, ALL NA engines are still going to lose ~3% tq, hp and cylinder pressure....per 1000' elevation....and that is quite simply b/c the air density decreases with elevation. There isn't "as much air" in a cubic foot of air. Doesn't matter if it's EFI or not. In fact, I have run my car here (at 4200' elevation at our track) then calc'ed the improvement for lower elevation...then gone and run my car at that lower elevation....and it's run that calc'ed number. This is an EFI car, BTW. A non computer controlled car could lose more power (more than 3%), assuming that one doesn't re-jet for the elevation.
    I think the real crux of the issue here, and the reasoning behind Ford's warning is when we talk about modern turbo charged (alt compensating) engines, such as Ford's Eco Boost. Most if not all modern Turbo charged engines use an electronic boost controller which is managed from the Manifold ABSOLUTE Pressure sensor. Absolute pressure. This means that a modern turbo engine is going to manage intake absolute pressure at the same level, up until such elevation that the turbos no longer have the capacity to maintain that manifold pressure. Below that elevation (whatever it is for a given engine/turbo combination...it's 12,000' on our snow cats, at work) you'd have the same absolute intake pressure at any elevation....but at "high" elevation, you can only get lower octanes (85, 87, or 91). So, telling yourself that you could run, say, 85 at high elevation b/c "less cylinder pressure" in the case of a modern turbocharged engine....that would be folly b/c that engine/mgmt system is going to keep intake pressure (and thus, cylinder pressure) absolutely the same regardless of elevation. Compounding the problem with detonation, is that a turbo must work harder to maintain that same intake pressure at higher elevations; the pressure ratio is greater, the compressor needs to spin faster and exhaust pressure is likely higher too, to achieve that same manifold pressure, the higher up you go. All of that adds up to what? Higher intake charge temps...which does what? Increases the propensity for knock. But your octane options are lower. Hence....Ford's warning.
    Back to NA EFI engines, in practice, at high elevations, I've found NA, EFI engines to be quite able to run just fine using the "old engine" octane requirement curve that you've posted. I ran a truck I had for 300,000 miles on '85 octane. 9.5:1 compression, EFI, towing my boat through the rocky mtns, in up to 115*F ambient temps....elevations ranging from ~4000' to 7000' where I live. Truck didn't care, ran great and lasted way longer than long enough.
    I'd re-examine this topic and look at it through the lens of today's turbo charged engines with Electronic Boost Control, which have become quite popular compared to engine offerings during the "old engine" times.

    • @ChurchAutoTest
      @ChurchAutoTest 2 роки тому +5

      Thank you. This entire video could have been condensed to about 2 min saying "Don't use lower octane fuel at elevation in a modern turbocharged engine because they compensate for reduced atmospheric pressure by increasing manifold absolute pressure". There's nothing wrong with dropping 2 octane points at high elevation on non turbocharged engines.

    • @jimb4090
      @jimb4090 2 роки тому

      Exactly right. Racers, piston engine aircraft owners, and the terminally curious will have researched this topic and come to the same conclusion as you present. Short and sweet.

    • @ChurchAutoTest
      @ChurchAutoTest 2 роки тому

      @@jimb4090 Well you know the old saying, "engineering explained - just smart enough to be dangerous"

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  2 роки тому +12

      Yes, less elevation = less power, bc there's less air. Stated throughout the video, and in big text at 7:54. Optimizing for efficiency (which also increases power) happens when you have electronic ignition control, regardless of elevation. That doesn't mean you make sea level power, it means the control system compensates and adjusts timing accordingly. Old engines don't do this. As mentioned at the end of the video, turbo engines increase over atmospheric pressure, so you still need higher octane fuel.

    • @ChurchAutoTest
      @ChurchAutoTest 2 роки тому +5

      @@EngineeringExplained You missed the point. Engines are rarely octane limited at light loads. Most can reach MBT at 70-80 kpa of manifold pressure or less without knock. That's why they don't need higher octane at elevation, because they aren't generating enough cylinder pressure. You can advance the timing all you want, but past a certain point all you're doing is reducing efficiency and increasing bearing load. It is only when you have a turbocharged engine with absolute pressure targets (at an elevation where the turbos can still reach those targets) that you should be careful about reducing octane, as Mr. Kendrick adroitly pointed out.

  • @d-rockpain4250
    @d-rockpain4250 2 роки тому +14

    I've been anti ethanol this whole time. We maintained a truck fleet and ran ethanol in 1/2 for several years, and the increase in maintenance cost way outweighed any potential benefits. There was a 15% higher overall cost to maintain the ethanol fleet, and the mechanical issues were bigger lower end damages. They stopped the ethanol testing immediately. Any similar stories? Tell em.

    • @ValConB
      @ValConB 2 роки тому +1

      D-Rock Pain - What was the ethanol percentage that you used in that truck fleet? I think in my area it is 10%, just wondering if it is different in other parts of the country.

    • @d-rockpain4250
      @d-rockpain4250 2 роки тому

      @@ValConB same. Up to 10% unless E85 I believe was allowed 15%. (Was 20yrs ago roughly). The fuels were run through trucks And fans, since most hydrostatics and big trucks were all diesel.

    • @smileyguyz
      @smileyguyz 2 роки тому

      @@d-rockpain4250 Unfortunately ethanol is here to stay. It sucks but it's much much better than the alternative, which is leaded fuel.

    • @d-rockpain4250
      @d-rockpain4250 2 роки тому +1

      @@smileyguyz What were they using from 1996- 2005/6? There is a 9-10yr overlap of lead being removed, and ethanol not yet being added.

    • @AlejandroLopez-ze8gu
      @AlejandroLopez-ze8gu 2 роки тому +2

      @@d-rockpain4250 Different additives like MTBE and BTEX Complex

  • @mattkovacs2732
    @mattkovacs2732 2 роки тому

    I owned an '85 full-size Ford Bronco with the 351 Windsor engine when i lived in Detroit Michigan. I actually got the owners manual even though i bought it 10 years old. In that manual, it stated that the 351W was designed to run on the lowest octane fuel available. The local Speedway gas station sold 86 octane and that engine loved it! One day i felt like giving my truck a higher octane fuel and that gave my engine spark knock that lasted about a month before i found the solution (which i can not remember). This truck was running a 650CFM holley carb (that was junk...buy edelbrock) and got 4 mpg no matter where i drove it (city, hwy, 4x4) so i was happy to spend a few pennies less per gallon. Of course this is when 87 octane was between .89 and .99 cents per gallon.

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL 2 роки тому +11

    I've never seen 85 octane fuel. And I cannot remember an owners manual that would allow it.
    Great video!

    • @11lizgoodall
      @11lizgoodall 2 роки тому +2

      We have it in Colorado, at least where I live at 8500 feet. It's what I put in our F250.

    • @DJR5280
      @DJR5280 2 роки тому +4

      85 is at every station in Denver

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 2 роки тому +3

      @@11lizgoodall yeah, itcs only for elevation. Residents have no problem running it.
      The problem would be filling up and going to sea level and driving hard.

    • @amorton94
      @amorton94 2 роки тому +1

      I don't think I've seen a station in CO that didn't have 85. If we have any, I'm sure you can count how many of them there are with your fingers. Unfortunately, our 85 is the same price and everyone else's 87.

    • @TimkaD736
      @TimkaD736 2 роки тому

      85 at every station in Colorado Springs, Denver and other nearby cities. There are a few places that does sell 93 as well (8th and Kipling) I don't remember where others are at lol.

  • @WeirdSeagul
    @WeirdSeagul 2 роки тому +5

    this was way more interesting than i expected

  • @spaceace1006
    @spaceace1006 Рік тому

    I use 93 octane in my 2017 F150 2.7 Ecoboost. Same for my 2007 Harley FB 96ci.
    I also use 93 for my Mower & Chain Saw. I read somewhere that if you burn 93 in the
    2.7 Ford EcoBoost, it increases the HP from 325 to 345. Most I'd not all Harleys require
    minimum 91 octane. Of course, 93 is excellent for small engines; especially for 2 stroke
    applications!

  • @MalindaWe
    @MalindaWe 11 місяців тому

    I drive a turbocharged that requires for premium gas by manufacturer but for all these years I only pumped regular (87) and never had problems. My buddy who drives a Mercedes C class also pumps regular gas for the last 10 years and has zero issues. In rear case it might activate limp mode when you drive uphill on backroads as if you on a race track!

  • @pipercdefgabc2005
    @pipercdefgabc2005 2 роки тому +7

    If people would learn more about their cars, trains, plans and factory's and take responsibility this world would be great. God put you here and I have to live with you!