Tony, While Neil's D500 may run OK with 87 octane at 4000 ft altitude where the lower atmospheric pressure lowers the combustion chamber pressures, any engine over 9:1 compression should seriously consider 92+ octane. Especially if you have improved upon the extremely conservative ignition advance curve the 56/57 D500s had. Those are already retarded 10 degrees compared to a 315/325 Poly (C/R 8.0) because of their compression ratio. The reason premium fuel gets better gas mileage is that you can run the engine with more ignition advance, which is more efficient. If you have to retard the ignition advance to use 87 gas, you will spend more money because of an improperly tuned engine than you save on gas. But using more octane than the engine needs is also a waste of octane and money. You might try 87 gas, but don't fill the tank over 1/2. Leave room to add some of that 110 gas if the engine pings under acceleration, especially on a hot day. Gas for different brands may all come out of the same pipeline, but the additives can make a big difference. Just like soda pop, the water may come out of the same faucet, but the flavoring additives makes all the difference. Dave Homstad 56 Dodge D500 -----Original Message----- From: Forward Look Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of eastern sierra Adj Services Sent: Monday, August 25, 2008 11:24 AM To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [FWDLK] Octane I routinely install regular grade gas in my car (87 octane) , also a 57 D500 with 9.25 :1 combustion ratio, year round here, at 4K' elevation, without any apparent adverse reactions. You can adjust your car's timing to the gas grade, and just don't try to do anything dumb, while using the lower octane. Name brand gas does have more-better additives than the discount brands, but the base-gas is all the same chemical substance; when the tanker pulls up to the refinery, or wherever it gets its gas, the attendant figures out what brand/type of product the tanker is supposed to receive, and, just like the way your local hardware store mixes up paint-to-order colors, the attendant adjusts some valves and differering quantities of additives are added to the base gas, to produce "Shell", or "Texaco" or "CitiesSevice", or BumFart blended gasoline. It is claimed that higher octane might produce better MPG, but, gas-is-gas ; the difference between the commercial products is the quantity and quality of the additives which are put into the gasoline. Neil Vedder -----Original Message----- From: Forward Look Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Anthony C. Boatman Sent: Monday, August 25, 2008 10:58 AM To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [FWDLK] Octane Hi All, I have a 57 Dodge with the D-500 Hemi engine in it, and I've been using Unleaded Premium with a 93 octane rating. It runs just fine, but I'm wondering if I am spending extra $$ I don't need to. Should it run equally well with lower octane? Considering I drive it about 200 miles a year at most, I guess it doesn't really matter, but is higher octane really better for this engine? A local station has begun carrying 110 octane, and some have suggested I even switch to that. Since I've never driven the car faster than 65 mph that I can remember, it's not like I need any more power. Thanks, Tony Boatman 57 Dodge D-500 ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1
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