Consider the Yukon Denali and Yukon XL Denali and the Tahoe Premier or High Country and Suburban Premier or High Country.
These are full frame trucks built for towing and comfort and will still be on the road 20+ years from now faithfully serving their owners. These do not share the spartan...
Lubricity is greatly diminished after about 5,000 miles, regular or synthetic. Rub new oil between your fingers and some of that old oil between your fingers. Which do you think your engine prefers?
This was in the 1990s. I would run it daily for one week a year when I took the car to Bowling Green, Kentucky for the annual GS Nationals.
We often ran 100 unleaded or VP racing fuels all weekend long in town when we were dumb and street racing. I had a drawer full of new O2 sensors for each...
I used to run Sunoco's 104 unleaded in my Buicks. That increased fuel efficiency even more and the motor loved the stuff. It of course ran faster in the quarter mile, ran 4 degrees cooler and idled more smoothly as well. Great stuff! My truck on E85 behaves the same way except for the gas mileage!
How can there not? Different additive packs for starters. For more than ten years, I would always count on Shell's 93 to deliver 2 mpg less than Mobil's 93. Cumberland Farms was even worse.
I paid a lot of attention to brands back in the '80s and early '90s. Then settled in to just using 93...
That's a direct injection motor right? That was my one caveat. I challenged a guy on another forum a few years back and he proved me wrong with the 5.3 in his Chevrolet Tahoe. But he does see differences in fuel economy by brand, as I have.
Have you run and maybe documented such yourself? I've never seen this to be true excepting DI engines and even they see differences in efficiency between brands of fuel even.
Well, today it resides in my head. I threw away all the little note pads from the cars a few years ago when cleaning out the garage. I do however have detailed logs in excel spreadsheets for my two trucks.
Right after purchasing the Yukon, I ran a couple of tanks of 87 and she ran like crap...
That's quite revealing man. Thirty plus years ago I proved that and engine that does not advance timing or change fuel delivery also runs more efficiently on higher octane versus lower octane fuels. As Doctor Fauci says, "It's just common sense". ;)