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Regular or premium

d1h
Nomad III
Nomad III
I know that Chevy recommends premium gas in the 6.2L engine. What do all of you out there use? Is using regular a bad idea?
28 REPLIES 28

Lynnmor
Explorer
Explorer
time2roll wrote:
I would use the minimum recommended octane as specified by GM.
My 1970 Mustang required 98 Octane and best available was 94 then 92. Probably ran a lot better in 1970.


The R+M/2 rating system is what changed, current premium is about the same octane as before 1970. Of course the ethanol causes higher consumption and the lack of lead causes more valve and valve seat wear.

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
I would use the minimum recommended octane as specified by GM.
My 1970 Mustang required 98 Octane and best available was 94 then 92. Probably ran a lot better in 1970.

Wishin
Explorer
Explorer
It depends a lot on the engine. Compression ratio, turbo or not. Most vehicles will make a small amount more power with Premium. If it is designed for Premium, it can make a noticeable difference. The only vehicle I've ever owned that cared, is my 2014 Cruze Eco MT with the 1.4 turbo motor. It calls for 87 octane, but in the summer it runs horrible on 87 octane. I can tell it runs the best on premium unless the temp's are below freezing. I run 93 octane most of the year, 89 octane in the late fall and early spring and 87 octane when the temps are below freezing. I can see how the 3.5 in the Fords with the turbos would behave in a similar fashion. It is only under certain circumstances, but it will really pull the timing and cut the boost to keep from pinging.

In the 6.2L, if you're not towing and in cooler weather, you might be able to get away with 87 octane. If not try 89 octane. If not happy with that under some conditions, run 91-93 octane. You'll just have to try it to see what works. Towing, you probably need premium to avoid issues, but you never know. Weather/temps does make a difference since it reduces the intake air temps and reduces the combustion chamber temps prior to detonation so it reduces the chance or pre-detonation when the temps outside are cooler.

Don't most Hemi's call for 89 octane? At least when towing?

It seems like in years past, it was 10 cents bump from 87 to 89 and then 10 more cents from 89 to 93 octane. Now days it is pretty much a 30 cent bump pre grade. 93 octane is pretty expensive.
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Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
Groover wrote:


At the current price here of $1.75/gal that narrows the price differential for the Ecoboost from $0.40/gal to $0.32/gal. I will stick with regular.


At the current price of $1.75/gal, you could pump 5 gallons into the parking lot while filling up and be money ahead still!

It's crazy how cheap gas is in some parts of the country! Cheaper than most recent decades in history! (accounting for inflation)
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Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
mkirsch wrote:
Used to be you only needed premium for these engines if you wanted the horsepower.
Going towing or drag racing? Fill up with premium.
Grocery shopping or a road trip? Regular was fine.

Must be things have changed.

We used to have an '84 Cadillac with that 4.1L aluminum V8 that would ping horribly unless you ran premium fuel. Back then premium was only a couple cents more so it wasn't a big deal.


They haven't, although it appears that "some" engines/tuning does not support or adjust timing as well for low octane.
What you're speaking of is old engines that aren't smart. And if they're built for premium, they'll tell you right away when they're not happy with the cheap booze!
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philh
Explorer II
Explorer II
Groover wrote:
At the current price here of $1.75/gal that narrows the price differential for the Ecoboost from $0.40/gal to $0.32/gal. I will stick with regular.

Anecdotal without any data, my 3.5L ecoboost seemed to pull a lot better on 91 pure gas.

Groover
Explorer II
Explorer II
ShinerBock wrote:
Here is a study AAA did several years back that actual has an Escalade with a 6.2L Ecotec in the test. The study tests the impact of regular and premium fuel on engines that require regular and premium. It shows short burst full load dynos and sustained dynos at 2,000 and 4,000 rpm which is where the difference between the two fuels is most noticeable in the real world especially when towing. There is also graphs on the amount of timing is advanced/pulled along with temps of the catalyst along with MAP/MAF sensor readings.

One major thing to note is the 7.1% fuel economy increase on the 6.2L with premium fuel under normal load. This was contributed to ability of the 6.2L to stay in 4 cylinder mode more often due to the significant timing advance at this load level creating more power per cylinder. The gen one 3.5L Ecoboost also had a considerable fuel economy bump of 5% with premium fuel.

AAA Premium Fuel Research


At the current price here of $1.75/gal that narrows the price differential for the Ecoboost from $0.40/gal to $0.32/gal. I will stick with regular.

noteven
Explorer III
Explorer III
mkirsch wrote:
Used to be you only needed premium for these engines if you wanted the horsepower.
Going towing or drag racing? Fill up with premium.
Grocery shopping or a road trip? Regular was fine.

Must be things have changed.

We used to have an '84 Cadillac with that 4.1L aluminum V8 that would ping horribly unless you ran premium fuel. Back then premium was only a couple cents more so it wasn't a big deal.


Things have changed in the hp/cubic inch department and in engine control systems.

ShinerBock
Explorer
Explorer
Here is a study AAA did several years back that actual has an Escalade with a 6.2L Ecotec in the test. The study tests the impact of regular and premium fuel on engines that require regular and premium. It shows short burst full load dynos and sustained dynos at 2,000 and 4,000 rpm which is where the difference between the two fuels is most noticeable in the real world especially when towing. There is also graphs on the amount of timing is advanced/pulled along with temps of the catalyst along with MAP/MAF sensor readings.

One major thing to note is the 7.1% fuel economy increase on the 6.2L with premium fuel under normal load. This was contributed to ability of the 6.2L to stay in 4 cylinder mode more often due to the significant timing advance at this load level creating more power per cylinder. The gen one 3.5L Ecoboost also had a considerable fuel economy bump of 5% with premium fuel.

AAA Premium Fuel Research
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mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
Used to be you only needed premium for these engines if you wanted the horsepower.
Going towing or drag racing? Fill up with premium.
Grocery shopping or a road trip? Regular was fine.

Must be things have changed.

We used to have an '84 Cadillac with that 4.1L aluminum V8 that would ping horribly unless you ran premium fuel. Back then premium was only a couple cents more so it wasn't a big deal.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
not even and Shiner are both right and itโ€™s dependent on many factors.
The beauty of modern higher performance efi engines is that most all will compensate for lower octane than recommended. To what degree is dependent on not only the engine specs and tuning but also temperature altitude and load on the engine.

To the OP, it isnโ€™t going to blow up with one tank of low test. Try it out. Pre detonation will be obvious. Lack of performance may or may not be. Fuel mileage if tracked accurately can also be an indicator of how it performs overall with different octane.

The old saying that too much octane does no good is still true. But under load, reduced perf from too high of octane will not damage an engine but too little octane can. Generally over time and exaggerated under heavy load.
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2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Bionic_Man
Explorer
Explorer
I can't speak on the new engines, but my 2011 Yukon Denali would ping if I didn't run premium.

The 6.2 LS3 on my wakeboat will run rough enough to throw a service engine code with low octane fuel (it's done it to me three times now - I hate marina fuel).

I would say that there is a reason the owners manual says to use premium.
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ShinerBock
Explorer
Explorer
noteven wrote:
Modern auto engines do not ping - knock detection adjusts timing and fuel to prevent any pre-ignition or detonation.

So when you buy an engine that is designed for 91 and you use 87 or less in it will run fine. It is not producing the power you paid for is all. Sometimes the vehicle will use more 87 per mile than 91, especially if you are tow / hauling and actually using max power.


Yes and no. While most modern engines can adjust to a certain octane, they can only pull so much timing and alter the cam profile to a certain degree. If the ECU pulls as much timing as it possibly can and the engine still knocks, then it is time to increase the octane. This issue is compounded with single cam pushrod engines versus overhead cam engines that have more flexibility and control of valve overlap along with ignition timing.
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2016 BMW 2.0L diesel (work and back car)
2023 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 3.0L Ecodiesel

Highland Ridge Silverstar 378RBS

noteven
Explorer III
Explorer III
Modern auto engines do not ping - knock detection adjusts timing and fuel to prevent any pre-ignition or detonation.

So when you buy an engine that is designed for 91 and you use 87 or less in it will run fine. It is not producing the power you paid for is all. Sometimes the vehicle will use more 87 per mile than 91, especially if you are tow / hauling and actually using max power.

My 2012 F350 - 6.2 V8 flex fuel engine runs the same or a bit better "$/mile cost" on E0 or E10 91 pump gas than E10 87 when tow/hauling. It pulls better in the mid range running on 91. This opinion based on 4000 miles hauling a slide in camper and towing a 22 ft trailer trip in the west of Canada and USA as far south as MX.

"They" say E85 ethanol gives better performance yet.

Running around local to my summer camp not towing I run E10 87 pump gas. It has plenty of power to achieve posted speed limits hauling nothing. But it I'm going to put it to work I use 91.

Stock powertrain with 100,000 miles on it including the spark plugs.