Is the Chevron gas THAT much better?

Gasoline is a fungible commodity and the vast majority of what makes fuel work is the base fuel. The fuel itself meets a commodity standard. That doesn't mean it's always the same just because it meets the standard, but it's not as if there's some intentional level of control where one refinery will maximize or minimize the characteristics like energy content, octane rating, etc for a particular grade of fuel.

In terms of refining, I'm pretty sure Chevron doesn't make any better fuel than Valero or XOM. Again - not that level of control and what's the incentive when they're just selling a commodity? It's mostly just pushed into a pipeline where they probably lose track of where it came from other than it's a particular commodity grade. Pipeline companies have no problem blending supplies of the same commodity grade from different refineries. And as much as there's this belief that many companies are vertically integrated where it's all one company controlling the product from the drilling platform to the gas pump, there's going to be horse trading of crude oil and finished base fuel - especially based on logistics.

But the additive may make a difference. Primarily the level of additive, although I suppose there could be some bulk additives where it's going to hit a wall where it's not any more effective at higher concentration. But I'm sure it's not costing them 50 cents more per gallon compared to the gas station across the street. They're paying for marketing and/or charging a premium.

I wasn't too particular about fuel brand or even perceived detergent level. I do remember a place that sold Red Line SI-1 for less than $3.50 per bottle for over a decade and a half. I have no idea how they managed to avoid raiding their prices. If I had a fuel I thought might just have EPA minimums, I would often just dump a small amount in even though they no longer had a maintenance dose listed on the label.
 
Exxon/Mobil use the same Infineum additives, so I believe their premium is equal and they tout the exact same benefits that V-Power touts.

Infineum doesn't make a bulk detergent additive any more. I remember an older list where they had a single detergent additive. I wouldn't know who makes it for them, but it legally has to be listed here:

https://www3.epa.gov/otaq/fuels1/ffars/web-detrg.htm

They have gasoline additives, but they're for other purposes.

https://www3.epa.gov/otaq/fuels1/ffars/web-gas.htm

INFINEUM USA
1900 East Linden Avenue
Linden, NJ 07036
(908) 474-3701
John Wise
Additive Name Certified Detergent Fuel Type
ECA 7955 (Paramins) G
Infineum C9945 G
Infineum V385 G
Paraflow 385 (Paramins) G
Parapol 450 G


Most of these seem to be pour point depressents, which I wasn't aware was needed in gasoline. The last one is apparently some kind of detergent, but not a bulk additive.
 
AFAIK the only refinery around here is in Richmond. So I'm not sure how much different the gas can be.
My Tundra would love to see $4.09 rag.

I don't think that's the case. Even Chevron shuts down refineries for maintenance or after unplanned events. For the following list, Marathon is now a renewable fuels processing facility.

Northern California: (Bay Area Air Quality Management District)​
Chevron (Richmond)​
PBF Energy (Martinez)​
Phillips 66 (Rodeo)​
Marathon Petroleum (Martinez)​
Valero (Benicia)​

But again fuel is a commodity. Maybe not identical in every way, but close enough that it's sold interchangeably.
 
Recently I have used a lot of Phillips 66 TT 93 octane in the motorcycle. No issues. I'll buy the 87 octane for the truck also when I have no fuel saver cents off from Hy-Vee..
 
I use TT but I won't pay more for it. Well maybe 2 cents, but thats about it.

The only thing TT does that the others do not is a) more detergent, and PEA is the only detergent I know of that has any testing, so you can just buy Techron or whatever if you need, and b) prohibits the use of organometallic additives, like MMT. While I do not thing its banned, my research indicates that almost nowhere in the USA has this in Gasoline anymore.

So don't pay a bunch more for TT. The best gas is the busiest station with the newest tanks.
 
I use Chevron, Texaco, Quick Trip, and occasionally Kroger. I realize Kroger isn’t top tier. Each one I named near me is high volume and I haven’t experienced any fuel related problems with either of them. I do add Stabil 360 to the OPE fuel can and a bottle of Techron in the vehicles every 5k miles or once a year.
 
It depends on how much you value Techron vs other name-brand additives like XOM's Synergy and Shell's V-Power.

I say that b/c I think all grades of Chevron gas get the same amount of Techron (please correct me on this), so with Chevron 93 you're literally only getting an octane boost rather than more helpful additives. This contrasts XOM gas where there's an appreciable amount more in the 93-oct Synergy Supreme+.

If I knew which of V-Power, Techron, and Synergy themselves were better, and I also knew the concentrations of them added to pipeline gas @ the terminal, the answer would be a lot clearer.

XOM started a pretty good marketing campaign for SS+ 4-5 years ago and are still running some TV commercials, and they claim it has Friction Modifiers. I think V-Power does too? I've never seen anywhere that domestic Techron has friction modifiers (except some research shows [foreign] Caltex Techron has FMs).

The base gas is the same since all of big oil trades it to one another, so the only variables then are the proprietary additive and station freshness.
 
I tend to only run Shell V-Power. I believe V-Power and the premium Exxon/Mobil offer is probably the best. V-Power has 2x the additives that the regular Shell has (which is itself Top Tier).

Exxon/Mobil use the same Infineum additives, so I believe their premium is equal and they tout the exact same benefits that V-Power touts.

Chevron I'm sure is the next best, but they don't tell us much or how much they are over gov / top tier levels.

Costco is also probably one of the best too, since it's always fresh and they add a bunch of lubrizol additive themselves right at the store. For regular 87 grade, I'm not sure anyone puts in as much as Costco.

76 does have a little more than top tier standard, 30 percent I believe, so you didn't pick something cheap when you went with that.

Thankfully I have a Shell that is about 1 mile out of the way, but has pricing within 10-15 cents of Costco, which is the cheapest in my area.
I used to buy my gas at Costco when going to the store. Now, unless you get there an hour before the store opens, there are 12 or more cars in every line. Even worse, the gas station is just inside a main entrance, so cars back up into the street, and you can't get in or out of that entrance. Just a huge mess every day. Sometimes the cars back up into the parking lot aisles, so people can't get out. Yes, much cheaper, but not worth the zoo anymore.
 
Not sure about the gas, but Chevron tends to have better quality station like newer cleaner pump, better bathroom, better lighting, etc. I'm sure their additives are top tier and likely PEA based, not sure if better or significantly better than other top tier PEA additives though.

I personally treat Chevron and Shell the same way, and would only pay a premium using their gas on one of my car but not my beater.
 
What people fail to get is that major oil company R&D teams formulate and test the additive package regardless of who they buy chemicals from …
This cocktail is added at loading in most cases …

Anyone recall these adds (they are one of the players):

IMG_0365.webp
 
In my experience, it's been totally dependent on the automobile. I've had cars that would willingly digest any swill available. I've also had cars that could be finicky without a steady diet of Chevron or least a bottle of Techron once a year.
 
I try to fuel up exclusively at Chevron / Shell / ExxonMobil - those are my personal “best” based on how they advertise the quality of their fuel and they (generally) have nicer stations.
 
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