- First Name
- Gary
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2025
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 1,187
- Reaction score
- 1,909
- Location
- Grand Canyon, AZ
- Vehicle(s)
- 2025 Maverick XL Hybrid AWD 4K Tow Package
- Engine
- 2.5L Hybrid
I missed the decimal vs comma. My bad. I wasn't expecting 3 digits with a zero value.If you look again, you will see that I said 1.000 and not 1,000. (3 digits past decimal to imply precision on the pump display) The rest really is easy peezy if you have a scale and remember to measure the tare weight of the can before filling up. A thermometer and graduated cylinder will round out your gear to check pump calibration as well as the dept of weights and measures. If you want to measure the alcohol fraction as well, the process is really simple since alcohols are soluble in water but gasoline is not. The graduated cylinder does that too. We learn things from actually doing that armchair Googling can't teach.
Your comment on the compressibility of liquid gasoline under barometric pressure changes is interesting. Admittedly, it is twice as compressible as water, but really...?![]()
A pump that displays values to 1/1000 of a gallon doesn't mean it's accurate, and no pumps used to dispense gasoline are anywhere close to that level of accuracy.
I attempted to note potential factors affecting volume, with temperature being primary, and pressure I agree is insignificant, but it's a nit, and you seem to like being thorough.
What seems lost in this now going way off topic conversation is that the weight of the fuel you measured is well within the normal range for 87 octane 10% ethanol fuel, which was noted, that can vary for all of the reasons previously outlined, even when the most precise measurements available are applied. The basic problem is you used an inaccurate weight to compare to.
Regardless of the effort and calculations made, you will only, at best, confirm a non problem.
I've got nothing more to add.
Sponsored
Then too, the nozzle drips more than the evap loss so we must not fool ourselves over precision. The ultimate goal (now lost in all the discussion) was to determine very simply whether the gas station was screwing its customers.