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If your car requires high-octane gasoline and you habitually use regular gas because the engine exhibits no sign of knock, youÆre outsmarting yourself. Most modern, computer-controlled engines include a knock sensor that detects knock and retards the ignition timing, causing the spark plugs to fire slightly later in the cycle. This typically prevents abnormal combustion and knock, which allows vehicles specified for premium fuel to run on lower-grade gasoline if it is all thatÆs available. While this removes the immediate hazard, itÆs a bad idea to make a habit of running a vehicle on gasoline of lower-than-recommended octane. Retarding the spark causes a richer fuel/air mixture, which decreases fuel economy, increases emissions, causes the engine to run hotter, and reduces the longevity of both the engine itself and the catalytic converter. The money you save by pumping low-grade fuel into a car that demands higher octane is lost anyway, in decreased fuel economy and possibly gradual damage.



I thought I was getting bad mileage due to approx 1K in extra pounds of nifty toys attached, bigger tires, lift, rack, and a bad plenum that I assume has a vaccuum leak. I get about 275miles to a tank - tire size adjusted. I sometimes got close to 400 miles with my 3.0 before all the mods. I use the recommended 92 octane in the 3.5 SR


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