You said the local guy is getting his gas from the same rack as Chevron. That statement has nothing to do with additives or ounces or any other god damn thing LOL. The ONLY way to interpret this is that you are saying the local guy is selling the same gas as Chevron. I was an English major, and communicate for a living. Yet, I would have thought the same thing had I read this in the 3rd grade.I didn't think so! And most readers won't misinterpret things but somehow you did.
What percentage of a gallon, or put another way, how many ounces of a gallon do you think are "fuel additives"?
All topics on a forum are contentious. There is a book that the moderators should post for sale. It is called The Death of Expertise. And is something most people should read.The only topic more contentious on a vehicle forum than fuel and octane: oil.
Nope. Sorry.You said the local guy is getting his gas from the same rack as Chevron. That statement has nothing to do with additives or ounces or any other god damn thing LOL. The ONLY way to interpret this is that you are saying the local guy is selling the same gas as Chevron. I was an English major, and communicate for a living. Yet, I would have thought the same thing had I read this in the 3rd grade.
You are really bad at forum's. This is not what you said. If this is what you meant, you should have said that. Instead, you said that the local guy gets the same gas as Chevron. No caveats. So again. My interpretation of what you actually said was correct. I am done bastardizing this thread. Some of you are absolutely exhausting.Nope. Sorry.
There's "splash" blending.
If so authorized, the Chevron driver can add a pre measured amount of "Techroline 5007 dilithium crystals" or whatever else is a Federally certified fuel additive. The other driver may not.
This can change the fuel a fraction of one percent, if desired.
If you read the link I posted above you will see that the EPA minimum for gasoline detergents doesn't work well and that's why auto manufacturers like Ford sponsored the Top Tier gas specification. I haven't read about any significant reduction in MPG from Top Tier gas.Code of Federal Regulations
Title 40
Chapter 1
Subchapter U
Part 1090
"GASOLINE ADDITIVE STANDARDS"
Treatment rate.
"Except for oxygenates, the gasoline additives used must be at a maximum treatment rate less than or equal to a combined total of 1.00 volume percent"
Requirements:
"Gasoline may not be sold or transferred to a party who sells or transfers gasoline to the ultimate consumer unless such gasoline contains detergent additives which have been certified. These detergency requirements apply to all gasoline whether intended for on-highway or non-road use, including conventional, oxygenated, reformulated, and leaded gasolines, as well as mixtures of gasoline and alcohol fuels."
"Gasoline detergent additive must meet minimum concentration standards. The manufacturer of any detergent additive wishing to be certified as compliant must submit data showing concentrations in parts per thousand to four decimal places."
I can't find a minimum VOLUME standard for detergent additives because as you might expect, some ingredients clean better than others. So you'd naturally need a lower volume of one compared to another.
But clearly, clearly ALL gasoline sold must contain "minimums" for detergent additives (and it sounds like these are added at the factory before distributed to the Mom & Pop retailers) but there is clearly an upper limit of maximum 1% by volume.
More detergent = less energy = lower MPG. So you want the right amount. Not just assume "more is better".
"Most" things you add to gasoline are going to lower MPG.
HTH,
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https://toptiergas.com/licensed-brands/All gasoline grades must be treated with an approved TOP TIER™ Detergent Gasoline additive at the correct concentration
What markets have premium ethylene free? Ethylene is used to boost octane. But does not have the energy as gas. Just curious where that is?Well, MOST gas stations make this claim.
But I agree with the road warriors out there actually doing the driving. Octane alone is not a MPG booster.
The data gets muddied by the fact once in a while, in some markets, "Premium" fuel is ethanol free and "regular" is 10% ethanol.
It is the change in ethanol, not the change in octane that boosts MPG.
I guess your extensive experience gave you superpowers to read between the lines. But, you invented content not there.You are really bad at forum's. This is not what you said. If this is what you meant, you should have said that. Instead, you said that the local guy gets the same gas as Chevron. No caveats. So again. My interpretation of what you actually said was correct. I am done bastardizing this thread. Some of you are absolutely exhausting.
My Hybrid Maverick replaced a BMW that sucked down super premium. I save on much better mpg and being able to use regular gas. A big win/win.Isn't that the truth. Some of my local gas stations charge $0.90 to $1.00 extra per gallon for 93 octane. I'm sure glad I don't own a vehicle that requires the higher octane. To just break even, an EB Maverick would have to gain something like 8-10 mpg at those prices.