I LOVEPer google etc - this is how the additives are added to the tanker truck:
“ Top Tier gasoline gets its detergent additives (the “Top Tier package”) primarily through a process called **splash blending** in the tanker truck itself, rather than being fully pre-blended at the refinery or terminal in most cases. Here’s how it typically works in the U.S. and Canada:
### 1. At the Terminal (Rack)
- The loading rack dispenses **unadditized base gasoline** (CBOB or RBOB) into the tanker truck’s compartments just like it does for non-Top Tier brands.
- While the gasoline is being loaded (or immediately after each compartment is filled), a precise amount of the brand-specific **Top Tier additive package** is injected automatically or manually into each compartment of the truck.
### 2. How the Additive Is Actually Added
There are two common methods:
**A. Automated Injector (most common at large, modern terminals)**
- The rack has a dedicated additive injector system tied to the brand’s additive tank (e.g., Chevron’s Techron, Shell’s V-Power NiTRO+ package, Exxon’s Synergy package, Costco/Kirkland’s licensed package, etc.).
- As gasoline flows past the loading arm, a metering pump injects the exact dose (usually 1–3 gallons of concentrated additive per 8,000–10,000-gallon compartment).
- The injector is controlled by the rack’s computer so the driver simply selects the correct brand/additive on the terminal’s preset panel.
**B. Manual “Jugging” or “Splash Can” (still used at some smaller or older terminals)**
- The driver (or terminal operator) pours pre-measured 1- or 5-gallon jugs/cans of concentrated additive directly into the truck compartment through the manhole on top right after the compartment is filled with base gas.
- This is why you sometimes see truck drivers on top of the tanker pouring in blue, red, or green liquid from plastic jugs — that’s the Top Tier detergent package.
### 3. Mixing
- No special mixing equipment is needed. The additive mixes adequately through **splash blending** — the turbulence as the gasoline is loaded and during transport to the station is enough for uniform distribution.
- By the time the truck reaches the gas station and pumps into the underground tanks, the additive is fully blended.
### Why It’s Done This Way
- Each refiner/marketer (Chevron, Shell, Exxon, etc.) guards its proprietary detergent chemistry, so terminals store dozens of different additive tanks and inject only the correct one when that brand’s truck loads.
- It’s far more efficient than trying to keep hundreds of pre-blended finished gasolines in separate at the terminal.
### Summary
For virtually all Top Tier brands, the magic doesn’t happen at the refinery — it happens in the tanker truck via a small but precisely measured shot of concentrated detergent additive injected or poured in at the loading rack. That’s what turns regular base gasoline into Top Tier fuel.”
Thank you for adding it.
"1 to 3 gallons of additive is added to each 8,000 or 10,000 gallon tanker."
When you DIY and add a pint to your 15 gallon tank, I can see that doing something helpful.
15 x 128 oz per gallon = 1920 ounces
Pint = 16 oz
16/1920 = 8 parts per thousand cleaner
At the station you pay sometimes a lot extra for:
384 oz / 1,280,000 oz = 0.3 parts per thousand cleaner.
Scam.
Marketing.
But you do you.
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