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Diamond Enthusiast

Site Administrator

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I never used to think octane made a difference, but in 1999 I bought my first new car in 20 years and wanted to be sure to treat it right. I've never put anything but premium in it. After over 65,000 miles, when my oil gets changed (religiously every 3,000-4,000 miles), my oil comes out as clean as it went in. I thought that octane had something to do with how hot the gas burned in the engine, but I was looking at this site: www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/autos/octane.htmand it doesn't look like that's the case. Regardless, my car is as good as the day I bought it, so I plan on continuing to treat it to premium fuel. Good post!
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Diamond Enthusiast

Site Administrator

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I think the main reason why my engine is still so clean is because MOST of the miles I put on my car are HIGHWAY miles of 55+...So my engine is working at it's maximum capacity most of the time.
I'm not concerned that my oil comes out clean due to that, but I will continue to get it changed on schedule.
If I had city driving to contend with and this was happening, yes, I might be concerned!
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Platinum Enthusiast
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When my last truck started to get up there in miles there was a noticeable difference in performance with Regular VS Supreme. It would run great on Supreme but it would idol rough and lack power when I'd fill it with regular.
Since 85% of my driving is stop and go city driving I tend to always by Supreme, even though my new truck runs great on regular, I just feel more comfortable filling it up with Supreme.
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