JHZR2
Staff member
Car is a 1991 BMW 318i, with the M42 1.8L 4-cyl engine. I guess it has the best of the late 80s technology (distributorless ignition, etc.) but no knock sensor. I have replaced the ECU chip with a genuine dinan chip, and it is explained in the chip instruction manual that the car will require at least 92 octane.
I have always run it with 93, but have been kind of curious about what would happen if I ran it with less. I believe all stock e30 (3 series) BMWs reccomend premium octane gasoline, but some folks apparently run on midgrade and some have even run on regular with decent results, so I figured Id just give it a shot and try 89 octane in my nearly empty tank. Worst case scenario I could top with some octane booster or sunoco 94 Ultra.
I filled up, and added ~2.5 oz of lucas UCL, per my usual routine. Started the car up, idled it not knowing what to expect. I moved the car slowly from the gas station, and after about 10 seconds of moving, I heard a slight knocking sound. It quickly went away, and so I kept accelerating gently... It never came back, despite accelerating to about 40 mph.
I merged onto the highway, when getting heavy on the gas in 3rd gear or higher, it knocked for a short time rather slightly, then went away. After I got up to speed, I tried flooring it for a time in 5th gear, and it knocked again shortly, but then it went away.
Now the engine seems to run a bit smoother on the highway, its hard to get it to knock at all regardless of how hard I try to accelerate, in any gear, etc. Further, the MPG gage (instantaneous MPG, but not very accurate) sits higher now while cruising. This is good.
Could running on lower octane gas in an engine with no knock sensor help to heat things up and clean out the chambers? I am actually quite pleased on how it runs on the 89. Because I did hear knock on a few occasions, I will use 93 as usual from here on, but I am curious as to the possible beneficial effects that may have occurred by me running on the 89. I really feel that the engine runs smoother (but injector tick is still present), has at least the same power, and is running more efficiently.
Also, after sitting and idling at the station for about 30 seconds, then movinmg the car for about 50 feet, I got out and a strong odor seemed to be coming from the exhaust. It may be because I got the fuel at a conoco station, and conoco gas is 'top tier' gasoline, meaning that it has significantly more detergents and cleaners that are guaranteed to be in all grades at all stations across the country. Maybe it was doing some cleaning from the gas, or maybe it was the 89 octane fuel burning hotter???
Any ideas?
Thanks very much,
JMH
I have always run it with 93, but have been kind of curious about what would happen if I ran it with less. I believe all stock e30 (3 series) BMWs reccomend premium octane gasoline, but some folks apparently run on midgrade and some have even run on regular with decent results, so I figured Id just give it a shot and try 89 octane in my nearly empty tank. Worst case scenario I could top with some octane booster or sunoco 94 Ultra.
I filled up, and added ~2.5 oz of lucas UCL, per my usual routine. Started the car up, idled it not knowing what to expect. I moved the car slowly from the gas station, and after about 10 seconds of moving, I heard a slight knocking sound. It quickly went away, and so I kept accelerating gently... It never came back, despite accelerating to about 40 mph.
I merged onto the highway, when getting heavy on the gas in 3rd gear or higher, it knocked for a short time rather slightly, then went away. After I got up to speed, I tried flooring it for a time in 5th gear, and it knocked again shortly, but then it went away.
Now the engine seems to run a bit smoother on the highway, its hard to get it to knock at all regardless of how hard I try to accelerate, in any gear, etc. Further, the MPG gage (instantaneous MPG, but not very accurate) sits higher now while cruising. This is good.
Could running on lower octane gas in an engine with no knock sensor help to heat things up and clean out the chambers? I am actually quite pleased on how it runs on the 89. Because I did hear knock on a few occasions, I will use 93 as usual from here on, but I am curious as to the possible beneficial effects that may have occurred by me running on the 89. I really feel that the engine runs smoother (but injector tick is still present), has at least the same power, and is running more efficiently.
Also, after sitting and idling at the station for about 30 seconds, then movinmg the car for about 50 feet, I got out and a strong odor seemed to be coming from the exhaust. It may be because I got the fuel at a conoco station, and conoco gas is 'top tier' gasoline, meaning that it has significantly more detergents and cleaners that are guaranteed to be in all grades at all stations across the country. Maybe it was doing some cleaning from the gas, or maybe it was the 89 octane fuel burning hotter???
Any ideas?
Thanks very much,
JMH