85 to 89 Octane Update
#31
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 85 to 89 Octane Update
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 09:47:19 -0600, Lon <lon.stowell@comcast.net>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
#32
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 85 to 89 Octane Update
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 09:47:19 -0600, Lon <lon.stowell@comcast.net>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
#33
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 85 to 89 Octane Update
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 09:47:19 -0600, Lon <lon.stowell@comcast.net>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
wrote:
>
>Yeah, but you gotta admit, it is kinda hard on the local moth
>population, and sooner or later some tree hugger is gonna come after you
>for removing them from all those moths.
>
>Seriously, a can or two of a few of the better engine boosters every few
>tankfuls seems to work about as well.
>
>Allegedly the old mothballs in the tank is an urban legend.
>
30+ years ago, mothballs were made with Naptha, which boosted
something (octane?) in the gas and made it seem like you had more
power (Never tested it with any actual measuring device). Supposedly,
you ran the risk of deteriorating any rubber hoses that came in
contact with the mixture, but I never used them enough to see that
happen.
But at some point in the past they stopped using Naptha, and mothballs
were made with a different chemical that wouldn't be considered a
gasoline "additive" <g>.
....
>98XJ proclaimed:
>
>> With other cars (never a problem with my XJ), when I have had pinging
>> on a full tank of gas, I have added a few mothballs (nitrobenzene)
>> into the tank. It has not shown any harm to the engines of several of
>> my own or other family members' cars/trucks, and some permanently cut
>> to a lower-than-reccommended octane by adding a few at each fill-up.
>>
>> ...and their woolen seat covers seem to last longer, too.
>>
>> On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 18:55:40 -0400, "Spdloader"
>> <askforit@nospam.triad.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"Mindy" <drranchtx@nospamearthlink.net> wrote in message
>>>news:13e0abf9ggega2e@corp.supernews.com...
>>>
>>>>to follow up my last post, I refilled my 2001 Grand with 89 octane gas
>>>>rather than the cheapest gas of 85....there was a good differance in the
>>>>mountain pass lanes, I had more power to keep up with the speed limit and
>>>>even passed others on Interstate 70....maybe a bad tank of 85 but still I
>>>>will go with the 89 till I get down out of the 8 to 10,000 ft range of
>>>>highways....
>>>>
>>>>I did the usual pretrip maintence, new airfilter, oil change , new tires &
>>>>alignment and tune up....
>>>>
>>>>thanks to all for your input, even Bill... : )
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>I always run the highest octane I can get. Starts better, runs better,
>>>better fuel mileage, cleaner intake and injectors over the long haul, and
>>>only about $6 to $8 dollars more per tankfull. Better than any additive I
>>>can buy.
>>>
>>>Just my .02
>>>
>>>Spdloader
>>>
>>
>>
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