I have over 100,000 miles on my 2011 RX350 and have the following observations which are completely counterintuitive. Manual says 91 premium fuel is required, but there is ample evidence of people going 300,000 plus miles on this model with regular 87 octane and I'm hard pressed to find real world examples of damage. Here is what I find for driving 72-3 mph on interstate highways with wind not a factor:
On premium 93 octane: 23 mpg. The engine definitely has more torque and idles smoothly.
On regular E10 87 octane: 23.5 mpg. Notice minor loss of power and idle isn't as smooth
On Regular E15 88 octane: 24.2 mpg!
To me this makes no sense, but I swear it is what I've consistently seen. I thought it could be that premium gas has lower energy content (Btu/gallon) than regular but a refinery guy on BITOG provided documentation that this is not the case. And E15 has to have the lower btu content than the others but it gives the best gas mileage and is lowest cost. Just seems to be a sweet spot.
You would think my turbocharged EcoBoost Fiesta would benefit from higher octane even though it isn't required, but I can't say I can see a difference. I had a 2002 Nissan Maxima that recommended premium, but I had similar experience as with the RX.
Any technical explanation how this could be?
On premium 93 octane: 23 mpg. The engine definitely has more torque and idles smoothly.
On regular E10 87 octane: 23.5 mpg. Notice minor loss of power and idle isn't as smooth
On Regular E15 88 octane: 24.2 mpg!
To me this makes no sense, but I swear it is what I've consistently seen. I thought it could be that premium gas has lower energy content (Btu/gallon) than regular but a refinery guy on BITOG provided documentation that this is not the case. And E15 has to have the lower btu content than the others but it gives the best gas mileage and is lowest cost. Just seems to be a sweet spot.
You would think my turbocharged EcoBoost Fiesta would benefit from higher octane even though it isn't required, but I can't say I can see a difference. I had a 2002 Nissan Maxima that recommended premium, but I had similar experience as with the RX.
Any technical explanation how this could be?
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