Costco has a disproportionate amount of affluent customers, so even the premium will sell quickly.
There aren't any!Try to get behind the car that uses premium gas,
Well here's the thing, sometimes I'll only top off like 3 gallons or so, and bikes, unlike cars, aren't required by law to handle all flavors of gas (no VVT). I put midgrade in once, and immediately got knocking.So you walk the pumps and look at the total in dollars and gallons to determine who pumped premium? That's dedication!![]()
It wouldn't surprise me at all if they screwed up their calculation, because of exactly what mr. slack said:Just because the above ground gas station takes a lot of real estate doesn't mean much for the underground storage tanks. I'm confident they right-sized it. You could probably scrape up real numbers from the fire permits or town GIS data.
They don't "need" bigger than maybe a semi-trailer and a half to get their best pricing. Their 87 octane is likely bigger still so they can get gas at the most logistically relevant times-- times that don't interfere with customers in line to fuel up. For all we know the fill hole could be well off to the side so the trailers don't bock traffic. As you say, there's lots of real estate devoted.
Honestly it sounds like you got water in your gas that the ethanol coagulated with. The question is where did this water come from, was it pumped or did you somehow get rain water, vandals etc in your tank after you bought it? Costco should have a water in-tank warning device and/or separator at the dispenser.
That's not the case over here.Costco has a disproportionate amount of affluent customers, so even the premium will sell quickly.
That's so strange. I wonder how that happened?The gas in Costco's underground tank went bad b/c of the ethanol is what I'm saying.
There aren't any!
Your username had me thinking only of Kentucky, which would also align with regular fuel cars and HFs.
I thought the gas went bad?They do, right?
Like I said, my suspicion is the tank they use is too big for the area (they have an impressively large gas station), but nobody here tanks premium gas. I know this, b/c I will sometimes do the "fuel pump walk" where I check each pump and do the mental arithmetic to figure out if the last guy put premium gas or not. I do this b/c I'll sometimes refill the bike with only 3 gallons, really close to the minimum dispensing amount. I'd say the number is significantly under 10% for premium gas... and I also imagine costco is used to a clientele who more frequently tank premium. That and the overwhelming summer heat... I suspect I got the dregs of the oversized premium fuel tank, which was mostly water.
BMW K1200S, AKA the best motorcycle everJust out of curiosity, what kind of bike is this?
Where is "here"?
I highly doubt you got bad gas from Costco. For the amount of fuel they sell, a shipment of bad gas would have been noticed immediately.
That was my thought. We had a 2010 Jeep Wrangler that ran poorly on the first couple of tanks from Costco. After that it smoothed out.I’m wondering if the high detergents in their premium loosened up some dirt or crud in your engine. Go back and talk to one of the attendants and feel them out about if they got a bad load of gas.
That sounds like an excellent idea! <<<Now THAT'S sarcasm.Go back and talk to one of the attendants and feel them out about if they got a bad load of gas.
If it’s the same area the Costco gas comes from the same terminal down the same pipe. Only possible difference is the add pack.That was my thought. We had a 2010 Jeep Wrangler that ran poorly on the first couple of tanks from Costco. After that it smoothed out.
Too much crummy Speedway gas before the Costco fan boy gas that I now use![]()
If this is true I've been using bad gas for years and just about everything station in the Midwest must have bad gas.The gas in Costco's underground tank went bad b/c of the ethanol is what I'm saying.
Costco won’t even build a store where there’s less than like 250k people within like a 5-10 mile radius.If there's a Costco, there are a significant number of affluent shoppers around.