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Flannelman wrote:Here goes!
Octane is a rating for fuel given for two different components. Octane and Heptane.
Heptane has 0 octane, so its resistant to self ignite when compressed is low. Octane has a high resistance to self ignition. The Octane Number stems from the blend needed to match the test fuel. So, if the test fuel matches a blend of 10% Heptane and 90% Octane, the fuel is said to be 90 Octane fuel.
Heptane is used for Diesel rating. I think (from memory) most diesel is rated at 60 Heptane.
RON is Research Octane Number
RON is determined by a special engine that is designed to changed its compression while its operating.
MON is Motor Octane Number.
MON id determined by an engine with a set 10:1 compression and the timing is adjusted to find the onset of knock.
While both have their controls eg intake temp, ignition timing, this is the main difference between the two. It is this difference which give the different ratings. Eg, America uses RON which give the lower 87/91 octane and we have MON with gives 91/95 octane.
The names we have used and heard of are, Detonation, knock, pre-ignition, ping... all come under one banner. Unfavorable burn character. While all mean different things eg detonation is when the fuel explodes rather than burn and pre-ignition is when the fuel is ignited before the spark plug or by a hot spot elsewhere in the chamber.
All Unfavorable burn character can be traced to one thing, Too much heat.
While the engine must be hot, the only way to control the heat in a charge of fresh air and fuel is by having a low compression value.
Later intake closing reduces the engine ability to trap intake air at low RPM (called Volumetric Efficiency)
GDII wrote:That all makes sense. New technology allows better things to happen. Thanks guys.
I'm guessing running it on 98 would be pointless then?
http://www.acfa.org.sg/pdf/InFocus16_2014_06_JAMA_Towards_95_RON.pdf wrote:In 2012 the market share in
Japan for regular gasoline (90 RON) was 84.5% and for premium gasoline (100 RON) was 15.5%. In Europe the gasoline market was divided into 91 RON: 8%, 95 RON: 87.6% and 98 RON: 4.4%, making
the average gasoline RON in Japan 91.6 RON and in Europe 94.8 RON, a difference of 3.2 percentage points.
Grrrrrrr! wrote:I totally disagree with sergei
Its:
1) A NZ new company car AND
2) Manual/sticker says 91 is okay.
So run it on 91. Not sure what the problem here is. If you want you could try to do a 91 vs 95 economy test to see if the car runs any better on 95, but that would require several tanks of 95 to give it time to learn long term trims etc for 95, and a consistent driving style travel pattern to get results, which if its a shard car isn't going to happen.
Is your boss going to ask why you are buying 95 for a car that is designed to run on 91?
Also not sure where Sergei gets the idea that japan doesn't have low octane fuel:http://www.acfa.org.sg/pdf/InFocus16_2014_06_JAMA_Towards_95_RON.pdf wrote:In 2012 the market share in
Japan for regular gasoline (90 RON) was 84.5% and for premium gasoline (100 RON) was 15.5%. In Europe the gasoline market was divided into 91 RON: 8%, 95 RON: 87.6% and 98 RON: 4.4%, making
the average gasoline RON in Japan 91.6 RON and in Europe 94.8 RON, a difference of 3.2 percentage points.
Japanese fuel standards Regular actually is minimum 89 RON. It has links to the actual standards if you can read Japanese text
I think its a general internet myth that japanese performance cars are all run only on 100octane, if you believe that you probably believe all NZ cars run on 98
sergei wrote:
It is not a myth, as you look at owners manual for most of semi-performance JDM cars require premium fuel*. If you look up "JIS K 2202" standard it states that minimum for premium is 96.
120T and 180S requires Premium (even though same 1.8 in a different spec can be OK on regular).
sergei wrote:The approach put 91 in everything is wrong.
KinLoud wrote:A couple of things
Direct fuel injection
And/or
Atkinson cycle (vs otto cycle), i.e. Prius https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atkinson_cycle
sergei wrote:I have seen people put 91 in company Ford Focus, that clearly states min 95 on gas flap.
iOnic wrote:MPS requires 95. 9.5:1CR + Boost.
No fancy double injectors per cylinder. Just GDI and 2000+ psi fuel pressure from the pump.
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