Marc T
Full Access Member
Will 100 octane give a boosted vehicle any advantages without another tune?
Just curious, found some here. Expensive though, 5.60/Gallon!!
Just curious, found some here. Expensive though, 5.60/Gallon!!
Marc T said:Will 100 octane give a boosted vehicle any advantages without another tune?
Just curious, found some here. Expensive though, 5.60/Gallon!!
Nowwhat said:nope....however it is good insurance if the tune you have now is aggressive....if you are not getting any detonation you don't need it...
it will not make it run richer....but it will keep it from running leaner....burns slower....Marc T said:Thanks, will a higher octane actually make the air/fuel mixture run richer?
Nowwhat said:it will not make it run richer....but it will keep it from running leaner....burns slower....
Marc T said:Thanks, will a higher octane actually make the air/fuel mixture run richer?
Marc T said:Thanks for the great answers evryone, I will be sticking with 93 Octane!!:rock:
JMB Justin said:Octane above the level needed to prevent detonation, can actually harm performance. An example would be my friend Joe Donovan tuning a roe blown GTS this weekend. In an effort to push past the 720WHP mark, they decided to add 104 VP to the tank. The car lost 40WHP with zero changes, and even with additional timing could not get back tot he power made on pump gas, simply because the burn rate was slowed down way too much by the higher octane. As Mike said, it is good insurance if you have an aggressive tune however. As far as any vehicles PCM compensating for it, that is flat incorrect unless the tune is causing the knock sensors to have the PCM pull timing. If no timing is being pulled on pump gas, none will certainly be added by the PCM alone (without "tuning" it into the PCM) if a higher octane fuel is used.
Justin