barry68v10
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This is a complicated topic. Someone already pointed out that SOME high-octane fuels have different mixtures and detergent packages, so what are we talking about here?
87 octane is PLENTY for an engine below 9:1 compression, especially with only a 3.7 inch stroke.
As already noted, ethanol is not good for rubber and aluminum.
Good detergent packages will help with carbon deposits.
How do I solve that? I don't trust the oil companies since they're just trying to make a buck. I use 87 octane, try to avoid ethanol whenever possible, and put Amsoil gas detergent additive in every tank-full. I'm getting 60 mpg.
Using higher octane than required is not helpful. Octane DOES NOT increase thermal energy potential. It is simply a measure of how quickly fuel burns. Higher octane fuels burn more slowly. Low compression engines produce slower burning. This combination (high octane and low compression) causes fuel to burn at a time that does not contribute to the power stroke or outside the combustion chamber. You want the gas to burn at the rate the engine was designed for which is also a function of ignition timing and several other factors. An extremely hot engine can benefit from higher octane, since heat will increase combustion speed somewhat, but a condition like that should be remedied some other way...
For any other "motor-heads" out there, this is really just "engines 101."
Spend money on what you need for the Savage, Detergent, not Octane.
Just my 2 cents. (Pun intended.)
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