Originally Posted By: motor_oil_madman
We have 89 here in Houston. Never seen a pump that didn't have anything but 87, 89 and 93. I do believe the 87 and 93 blend together to make 89 though, which is actually 90.
As previously stated, it's just a 1/3 mix of super to 2/3 regular to get 89 if you have 87 and 93. For those that need super, most cars only require 91 instead of 93 so you could do 2/3 super to 1/3 regular to get 91 instead of paying for 93. On the west coast they just have 91 because they have more cars that need super than on the east coast. If you do the math, it's always cheaper to make your own mix rather than use the 89 mix at the pump, but then you have to make two transactions.
And in terms of BTU per gallon, it's about the same so if your car is running right, if it calls for regular, you shouldn't see any improvement with plus or super, you're just wasting money and giving it to the oil companies because they've convinced you that you're treating your car by giving it plus or super.
We have 89 here in Houston. Never seen a pump that didn't have anything but 87, 89 and 93. I do believe the 87 and 93 blend together to make 89 though, which is actually 90.
As previously stated, it's just a 1/3 mix of super to 2/3 regular to get 89 if you have 87 and 93. For those that need super, most cars only require 91 instead of 93 so you could do 2/3 super to 1/3 regular to get 91 instead of paying for 93. On the west coast they just have 91 because they have more cars that need super than on the east coast. If you do the math, it's always cheaper to make your own mix rather than use the 89 mix at the pump, but then you have to make two transactions.
And in terms of BTU per gallon, it's about the same so if your car is running right, if it calls for regular, you shouldn't see any improvement with plus or super, you're just wasting money and giving it to the oil companies because they've convinced you that you're treating your car by giving it plus or super.