Jeeperjamie
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Jamie
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2020
- Threads
- 135
- Messages
- 4,754
- Reaction score
- 5,412
- Location
- Kannapolis nc
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 jeep gladiator
- Occupation
- Weyerhaeuser
- Vehicle Showcase
- 1
I promise you it wasn't bad gas. I kept putting the higher octane in for a couple months with it knocking before I took it in to my buddies shop, who looked it over and found nothing wrong with it. He then asked if I had changed anything on it or been driving it differently, and I told him I had been running the higher octane gas and he suggested running what the manual says. He told me to run 87 octane it in for next few fill ups and see if it made a difference, well it did and the knocking went away. Like I said it knocked for two months, roughly 8,000 miles worth of driving and it took about 800 miles of regular gas to get it back to being quiet. I'm 100% positive it wasn't bad gas.You must have just had some bad gas. Knock protection is the fundamental reason to go for higher octane. More timing, more likely to have early detonation, which the higher octane protects against. OEM's usually don't tell you what octane to run, they give you a minimum. In the Gladiator manual they just tell you that higher octane doesn't help you.
Another way to talk about it is with air temperature and/or altitude. Early detonation is more likely to happen with warmer air (less oxygen). Higher octane increases the temperature at which early detonation can occur, effectively lowering the chances of it happening at the same air temperature. Higher altitude works the same way as warmer air (less oxygen) which is why in places like Colorado you'll see 85 octane as the minimum octane sold vs 87. The cars can handle the lower octane because they're less likely to knock since their air has a lower oxygen content. All of this is why I typically will run mid grade (typically the 88 octane from Sheetz) fuel when it's really hot out and then I move back to 87 when it cools down.
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