May sounds silly, but what Does higher octane do?
better efficiancy, emmisions are lower, more power?
I can honestly say I notice no difference at all between 95 or 98/99 RON fuel.
Just as smooth / rough on either, same fuel economy, no discernible difference in power, no pinking on 95.
The Tesco stuff I fine makes the engine a lot smoother than the usual 95 RON, and if you can't notice it then I'm amazed.
As proven time and time again, it's a placebo and a marketing ploy.
So 99 RON is a marketing ploy? Damn, better tell the racecars who run 105, they'll be amazed how much they can save by using 95!
Read what you wrote - race cars that have been mapped to run specifically on 105 octane not a 2.0L n/a road car.
The clios were mapped to run on 98, so where's the difference? (iirc)
Also I run an RSTuner map designed for 98Ron, still missing your point.
In my experience of having had a 182 and R27 then a 172 up until last year, no ecu mods right enough but the ecu will adapt to the fuel that you put in, whereas your car has been mapped to run on 98ron or better. I just think people get a bit wet over saying they out VPower in, BP Ultimate etc when the standard 2.0L engine will perform exactly the same on 95 give or take a few mpg.
I normally use Tesco 99 with 5 tins of octane boost, spits flames on gear changes over 5k.
It burns slightly hotter, which gives all of these ^ results in small amounts. Plus it keeps the engine 'cleaner'.
The usual can of worms !
In my limited experience of 182 ownership so far - had 2 tanks of 95, then a tank of 99. No difference in mpg , idle or performance , more testing needed maybe but I wont be worrying my head about having to put 98+ Ron in , if I had a turbo it would be a different story !
The higher the Octane the less volatile the explosion which means basically it explodes when it's fully compressed by the piston under spark when the piston is ready to travel down, lower octane can prematurely explode under compression(because compression causes heat) when the piston is still travelling up causing inefficiency and potential damage..... Hope this makes sense.... At altitude the octane sold in stations can be as low as 85 I think as the air is less dense meaning less oxygen so needs a lesser volatile fuel to run efficiently.....
What petrol do you use Einstein?