dcmdon
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Don
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2021
- Threads
- 60
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- 3,656
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- 4,427
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- Boston Metro-West, Northern NH
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The 3.6 is tuned to run on regular.
If it was tuned to run on premium, it might make a bit more power and actually get a bit better fuel efficiency , but that is the trade off.
Higher octane (which is a measure of resistance to detonation) allows a higher combustion ratio and more ignition advance, two things that increase engine thermodynamic efficiency. So they help both power and fuel economy. But it's a small bump. Small enough that manufacturers need to weigh it against the increased fuel cost.
When you have a turbocharged engine, things can really change. My wife's car has a 3.0L turbo 6 in it and it officially makes about 10% more horsepower on premium than it does on regular. It matters more for turbos because it allows them to run more boost at mid RPM which can bump power and torque noticeably.
But all modern cars designed to run on premium will run fine on regular. They will just have less power. Prior to the Covid/Biden fuel price insanity, premium was 30 cents more per gallon. So we ran only premium in her car.
Now, locally, premium is 1.20 more than regular. So we're running regular. The car adapts. There is less boost and less power, noticeably so. If I was going to tow with it, I'd run premium, but now that I have the Jeep, we tow with my truck.
So in summary, in a normally aspirated engine designed to run on regular, like our 3.6, there is absolutely ZERO benefit to running premium.
If it was tuned to run on premium, it might make a bit more power and actually get a bit better fuel efficiency , but that is the trade off.
Higher octane (which is a measure of resistance to detonation) allows a higher combustion ratio and more ignition advance, two things that increase engine thermodynamic efficiency. So they help both power and fuel economy. But it's a small bump. Small enough that manufacturers need to weigh it against the increased fuel cost.
When you have a turbocharged engine, things can really change. My wife's car has a 3.0L turbo 6 in it and it officially makes about 10% more horsepower on premium than it does on regular. It matters more for turbos because it allows them to run more boost at mid RPM which can bump power and torque noticeably.
But all modern cars designed to run on premium will run fine on regular. They will just have less power. Prior to the Covid/Biden fuel price insanity, premium was 30 cents more per gallon. So we ran only premium in her car.
Now, locally, premium is 1.20 more than regular. So we're running regular. The car adapts. There is less boost and less power, noticeably so. If I was going to tow with it, I'd run premium, but now that I have the Jeep, we tow with my truck.
So in summary, in a normally aspirated engine designed to run on regular, like our 3.6, there is absolutely ZERO benefit to running premium.
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