Putting in Regular
If I expect to use my engine to best capacity (i.e. heavy loads, towing, street racing), I am better of using Premium for preformance and avoid pinging. BTW, Any chemists out there who want to comment on this, regarding free carbon chains in the molecule derived by the catalyzing of the fuel during refinement.
If I would like to economize a bit in an area that has more expensive gasoline (i.e. $2.40 g/reg vs. $2.60 g/prem) I can use the lesser qualified fuel without fear of me coating my engine with some permanent goo.
--------- what my rational is for using the lesser grade -------
In the long run, I will not be damaging my engine, but I may slightly increase the carbon buildup in my engine with the lesser fuel and lower detergent concentration. (perhaps running a cleaning solution around every oil change time will minimize this situation.)
If you put 10K/yr and chose which ever fuel you desire ( about 16.5mpg avg - at around $0.20/gal difference between the grades) a year on your car that would translate to around $121/yr difference.
What I have noticed, is no one is saying you will DAMAGE your engine if you chose the lesser grade. You will not realize the full capacity of your truck's preformance. It just depends on which you desire more. The need for speed/performance or the need for greater distance using less money.
Personally, I have noticed a slight difference between the grades (btw I use Chevron). But, I have already noticed that there is less casual driving in my area on the weekends. This could be indicative of what other people think as well.
PS - Personal use. I have a property at Mrytle BEach and have run the exact trip with both premium and regular. The weather conditions were similar (low winds and clear skys) on similar temp days 40-50's (as it was in the winter). The regular actually gave me "slightly better fuel economy (21.3 vs. the premium's 20.8).
i knew some s class owners who would use regular gasoline for their cars and i was very suprised. i then asked some of the owners for the reason and all of their replies were" it's a leased car, we could care less". so if that's the viewpoint of this thread then i can understand somehow, but if this thread is geared towards the 'owners' of the vehicles who are talking of keeping it for 100k range, then....
i knew some s class owners who would use regular gasoline for their cars and i was very suprised. i then asked some of the owners for the reason and all of their replies were" it's a leased car, we could care less". so if that's the viewpoint of this thread then i can understand somehow, but if this thread is geared towards the 'owners' of the vehicles who are talking of keeping it for 100k range, then....

i knew some s class owners who would use regular gasoline for their cars and i was very suprised. i then asked some of the owners for the reason and all of their replies were" it's a leased car, we could care less". so if that's the viewpoint of this thread then i can understand somehow, but if this thread is geared towards the 'owners' of the vehicles who are talking of keeping it for 100k range, then....

but if the gx manual says regular is recommended, then surely let's make use of it
but if the gx manual says regular is recommended, then surely let's make use of it
here's an article that explains it. as per the article, in the last paragraph. "In general, the lowest octane in your area delivers the best mileage."
http://www.lubedev.com/smartgas/octane.htm
Celebrating Lexus & Toyota from Around the Globe
i knew some s class owners who would use regular gasoline for their cars and i was very suprised. i then asked some of the owners for the reason and all of their replies were" it's a leased car, we could care less". so if that's the viewpoint of this thread then i can understand somehow, but if this thread is geared towards the 'owners' of the vehicles who are talking of keeping it for 100k range, then....

Your kidding me right ?????? You think that someone should buy a car or truck based on the type of fuel one might or might not buy? I think one buys a vehicle for the build quality, and internal features as well as name recognition. But, I don't think someone would prefer to buy a lesser car because they had a Premium Fuel Phobia. Perhaps, I am reading your statement out of context. It just struck me as really bizarre.
Last edited by ADVocate; Apr 5, 2005 at 12:28 PM.
here's an article that explains it. as per the article, in the last paragraph. "In general, the lowest octane in your area delivers the best mileage."
http://www.lubedev.com/smartgas/octane.htm
"since all gasoline must meet government minimum standards for certain key additives, in most cases, it doesn't matter what brand or grade of gas gets put in the tank."
"often the suppliers are the same ones providing gasoline to the major gas-station chains."
It gives as an example, "Costco is the same fuel that branded stations such as Shell and Chevron and BP typically sell, often from the same refineries." But it goes on to say it's not exactly the same: "The difference is that the branded fuel contains a small amount of detergent...."
On the other hand, to give credence to those who say that certain brands are better than others, the article recommends for those using cheap gas to use a detergent additive "as infrequently as every 3,000 miles." Or to "fill up occasionally on branded gasoline that contains extra cleansing compounds, and then buy discount gas the rest of the time," which "should be adequate to keep values and fuel injectors from clogging."
It also quotes a AAA spokesman recommend buying regular gas "even for cars in which the owners manual recommends a higher octane gasoline." If the car pings or knocks, then "switch to a higher grade."
"since all gasoline must meet government minimum standards for certain key additives, in most cases, it doesn't matter what brand or grade of gas gets put in the tank."
"often the suppliers are the same ones providing gasoline to the major gas-station chains."
It gives as an example, "Costco is the same fuel that branded stations such as Shell and Chevron and BP typically sell, often from the same refineries." But it goes on to say it's not exactly the same: "The difference is that the branded fuel contains a small amount of detergent...."
On the other hand, to give credence to those who say that certain brands are better than others, the article recommends for those using cheap gas to use a detergent additive "as infrequently as every 3,000 miles." Or to "fill up occasionally on branded gasoline that contains extra cleansing compounds, and then buy discount gas the rest of the time," which "should be adequate to keep values and fuel injectors from clogging."
It also quotes a AAA spokesman recommend buying regular gas "even for cars in which the owners manual recommends a higher octane gasoline." If the car pings or knocks, then "switch to a higher grade."
ET - Interesting artical but it looks more like a basic "which manufactors product is betterl is better than another" rather than a "best fuel for your car" article. I've seen these before and most say that they are all about the same (a good way of using space to say nothing). Some argue that Texaco is better than BP but for the purposes of this thread, I don't think a brand recommendation is what we pursuing here in this thread but rather "Should use regular or premium in the GX". The final line you quoted can do as much harm as good in that a car CAN use lower grade fuel and NOT ping but it may also result in worse fuel economy. Just because the car does not ping when run on regular is NOT a good reason to use regular fuel. Fuel economy being better when running a car on regular is a valid reason. Maybe splitting hairs here?
Higher compression engines run better on premium, right? I think Lexus engines have 10.5 to 10.8 compression ratios. That's considered high, right? I just checked the Porsche 911 Turbo's specs, and its compression ratio is 9.8, and Porsche recommends premium.



