Premium fuel
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- Weekend Camper
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Sun Jun 30, 2013 12:09 pm
- B190 Year: 1996
- WBCCI: 0
- Location: Vermont
Premium fuel
I am curious if anyone has been using high test/premium fuel [92/93 octane] rather than regular/87 octane. About five months ago, I switched to high test and have found it makes a big difference in climbing power. Since the big beast is not my daily driver the extra cost is not that significant relative to improved performance. Now, if gas was $5/gallon rather than $3 things might be different... But, I am wondering whether anyone else has found that switching to premium makes a difference.
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- Seasoned Traveler
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2014 4:22 pm
- B190 Year: 1998
- WBCCI: 16771
Re: Premium fuel
I've not tried premium as it hasn't seemed necessary. Next time we take a trip I'll run a few tanks of premium to see if I think there's a difference. Our 1998 van has the V-10 engine with fuel injection.
We sold our 1998 B190, V-10
Currently own a 2010 Airstream Interstate
Currently own a 2010 Airstream Interstate
- skater
- Site Admin
- Posts: 2593
- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2007 1:00 am
- B190 Year: 1991
- WBCCI: 13270
- Location: Annapolis, MD
Re: Premium fuel
In general, I'm not a fan of using higher octane fuels than is recommended by the manual. However, there are some caveats to that. This article by Car and Driver sums it up well. It can actually help in an older engine, for example.
1991 Airstream B190 - bought, 2005; sold, 2011; bought 2017
1995 Airstream Excella 30' trailer
WBCCI #13270, Washington, DC Unit
1995 Airstream Excella 30' trailer
WBCCI #13270, Washington, DC Unit
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- Weekend Camper
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Sun Jun 30, 2013 12:09 pm
- B190 Year: 1996
- WBCCI: 0
- Location: Vermont
Re: Premium fuel
Thanks for the replies and the link to the article, Skater, a helpful read. I added premium the first time just to see if it would make a difference and I was struck by the pulling improvement going uphill. I have a '96 with the 460 cu inch. I am also wondering if the big BFG tires and rims and the 4x4 conversion, along with the re-gearing to 3:73, might add enough weight and resistance that the premium helps (?).
On the other hand, all that I have read also says that premium does NOT add more horsepower--so not sure what I am experiencing, perhaps a mind-created improvement... ? The C&D article does make the point that it can help older engines and since this is about 20 years... Fun and games!
On the other hand, all that I have read also says that premium does NOT add more horsepower--so not sure what I am experiencing, perhaps a mind-created improvement... ? The C&D article does make the point that it can help older engines and since this is about 20 years... Fun and games!
- lido14co
- Seasoned Traveler
- Posts: 259
- Joined: Wed Apr 25, 2012 1:12 pm
- B190 Year: 1992
- WBCCI: 0
- Location: Los Osos, CA
Re: Premium fuel
We did a 2000 mile trip last summer and I ran mid grade 89 octane ( van is a 92 with 351). Gas mileage improved by about 15% with an extra cost of about 4% as well as, i thought, better performance. Not sure I would run premium but really liked the mid grade results.
Cliff
Cliff