For a daily driver that runs ok on 87, filled up with 89- runs better, more responsive, overall nicer drive. But is it a wash on $ differential vs economy? My impression- it is NOT.
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So all in- does it pay for the upgrade?I believe it depends on your engine. Most N/A current Subarus like mine are fairly high compression (around 9.5:1 to 10.3:1). I see a small increase (1-3 mpg) in mileage with higher octane fuel. This is something I've monitored over the 15 years I've had this car and is apparent across weather and driving conditions for me.
We get 95RON E10 and 98RON E5. I can't notice any differenve between the two, at least not during winter. Got a road trip planned in May, might try 98 again.
The reality is that E10 isn't likely to contain 10% ethanol, as in europe the gasoline density must stay in spec, and you'd need heavy fractions of fuel to do that. 2-5% seems like the norm. Not enough to notice a mileage drop.
I know of two long term user "studies" if you will, where they controlled as much as they could. One was a R51 Nissan Pathfinder, which has the same mechanical VQ40 as my two Nissan's except it has a slightly different control setup and calls for 89 - we all assumed to get through cafe because they also run fine on 87. The other was the current generation Rav4, which I think was a AWD - ice model for sure.
They both documented improved mileage - but not enough to justify the additional cost. The cost around here is like 10% more, and they were seeing 3-4% mileage improvements - across multiple tanks.
Why don't you do it and get back to us? Probably different for every car.For a daily driver that runs ok on 87, filled up with 89- runs better, more responsive, overall nicer drive. But is it a wash on $ differential vs economy? My impression- it is NOT.
Just for fun I tried running a couple of tanks of Shell 93 in my Civic last year to see if I could notice any difference in how the engine responds or if the fuel economy changed. No difference whatsoever that I could see, so I went back to using Costco 87 again. I feel like there are very few cases where a car that calls for 87 will actually show any benefit from running premium fuel. The only time I would consider it would be if I had a turbocharged vehicle that calls for 87 (such as a new Mazda3 Turbo that can use 87 but will make more torque if you use premium)