I find my 172 idles much better on the higher octane fuels, and returns higger mpg.
Cool blue 106 octane - run your 172 on this and it will put a smile on your face ( £35 for 20 lts so save it for the track )
a map sensor measures manifold pressure and a potentiometer is basically a variable resisotor used in management systems in places such as throttle postition etc, they only time you are going to benifit from high octane fuel is if you actually need it, ie running high compression/ high boost on a forced induction engine as it would pink on lower octane fuel or you have ignition advanced to such a point that its pinking.Most modern vehicles fitted with a potentiometer / MAP sensor will detect an higher octane fuel running through the system and notify the ECU which should then advance or r****d the ignition accordingly. My clio had had an R-sport ECU fitted which did exactly that ( standard 172 will do the same )
When i ran the clio TT it was fitted with a DTA engine management system. When it was mapped it was mapped to run on 99 octane ( optimax ) if i had of put 106 octane fuel in the engine it wouldnt have made any difference as it was programmed to run on a specific fuel.
I seem to get around a rise of 4 mpg up from around 30 if i use V-power, which i always do....
I do sometimes wonder if BP would be better, but nearest station is 10 miles away in the wrong direction from where i mostly travel so havent tried any yet?
can anyone help me work out then if im getting better value for money by using v-power?
Im spending per litre around 98p as apposed 92p for normal shell and have seen an increase of 4 mpg over a whole tank?
cheers
=ditz
the cars not going to detect high octane fuel, and its a waste of money imo.
Might give you a couple of BHP more but it is largely psycological IMO.
=ditz
the cars not going to detect high octane fuel, and its a waste of money imo.
What a load of rubbish ??
MAP Sensor (Manifold Absolute Pressure) Measures the air pressure in the intake manifold. Changes in engine operation and speed will affect the MAP sensor reading, which the computer uses in fuel and timing calculations. Often it will have a single vacuum line connection plus an electrical connection. Some turbo charged cars also use the MAP sensor to measure barometric pressure
Mate - ive raced cars for 8 years now and know every trick in the book. There is a very big market for high octane fuel on the drag racing circuits starting from 102 - 120 octane. Have you ever tried it ?? Most people running high power turbo cars ( 300 BHP + ) run cool blue or VP - they swear by it and will not use anything else in there cars whilst racing.
http://www.motorshack.com/cgi-bin/ss000002.cgi?SECTIONID=VP_Racing_Fuels.html&NOLOGIN=1
of course theres a big market for it in drag racing, run those engines on cheap fuel and they would detonate like mad,=ditz
the cars not going to detect high octane fuel, and its a waste of money imo.
What a load of rubbish ??
MAP Sensor (Manifold Absolute Pressure) Measures the air pressure in the intake manifold. Changes in engine operation and speed will affect the MAP sensor reading, which the computer uses in fuel and timing calculations. Often it will have a single vacuum line connection plus an electrical connection. Some turbo charged cars also use the MAP sensor to measure barometric pressure
Mate - ive raced cars for 8 years now and know every trick in the book. There is a very big market for high octane fuel on the drag racing circuits starting from 102 - 120 octane. Have you ever tried it ?? Most people running high power turbo cars ( 300 BHP + ) run cool blue or VP - they swear by it and will not use anything else in there cars whilst racing.
http://www.motorshack.com/cgi-bin/ss000002.cgi?SECTIONID=VP_Racing_Fuels.html&NOLOGIN=1
The ECU does NOT detect higher octane fuel and adjust to take advantage of it. It detects lower octane fuel and adjusts to prevent detonation. So there's a programmed-in maximum octane level beyond which you get no further advantage.
In racing that maximum would be set very high so you could put better fuel in and get more power. But for a road car the manufacturer is going to set that maximum fairly low so that if the knock sensor fails your engine won't be destroyed. Certainly they wouldn't set it any higher than the highest octane generally available pump fuel at the time.
Since Renault put "98 octane" on the petrol cap that's what they almost certainly set that maximum to. Below that you lose power, but the engine isn't damaged. Above that you get no further power increase from the higher octane.
It may be though that since those higher octane fuels are premium products they may blend them or put additives in that make the engine run clear and smoother. But it won't produce any more power than if it was running on 98 octane. It may feel like it though.
You can get more power with more octane by upping the compression ratio. But that's not what the ECU is changing when it detects knocking. Its only changing ignition advance. If you look at how much that changes power versus how much higher octane fuel costs you find that, yes, higher octane fuel gives more fuel economy, but not in proportion to how much extra it costs.
People ask me why i dont come on the site no more and its because of bulls**t like this really - ive used the stuff for 8 years on race cars & road cars ( inc a 172 ) and it does make a difference.
Instead of copying and pasting from google websites and then coming on here thinking you know it all go and buy some and try it. This site is full of talk and no do
Later
now if your running manufacturers spec 98ron and go to 105ron you are still gonna notice a difference as the fuel is gonna burn fuller cleaner and faster.
People ask me why i dont come on the site no more and its because of bulls**t like this really - ive used the stuff for 8 years on race cars & road cars ( inc a 172 ) and it does make a difference.
Instead of copying and pasting from google websites and then coming on here thinking you know it all go and buy some and try it. This site is full of talk and no do
Later
i agree alot of forums talk bulls**t,[well not the forum itself the people on them].
at the end of the day once the fuel air mixture enters the cylinders its still a mechanical effort that drives an engine [not inlcluding plugs]. the same principal of the very first combustion engine.
so there for if you have 95ron and 105ron the 105 is still gonna burn quicker cleaner and fuller meaning more of the air fuel mixture is gonna get burnt.
this gives less hydrocarbons.
the burning process once the fuel has ignited is nothing to do with the ecu,its a burning process from then on.all the ecu is gonna do is recieve certain signals from sensors and adjust accordingly.normally adjusting injecter open time or ignition advance.
now if your running 95ron and your cars recommended 98ron you ARE going to notice a BIG difference as the ecu has made its optimum adjustments and the fuel is a better quality and higher ron.
now if your running manufacturers spec 98ron and go to 105ron you are still gonna notice a difference as the fuel is gonna burn fuller cleaner and faster.
i agree alot of forums talk bulls**t,[well not the forum itself the people on them].
at the end of the day once the fuel air mixture enters the cylinders its still a mechanical effort that drives an engine [not inlcluding plugs]. the same principal of the very first combustion engine.
so there for if you have 95ron and 105ron the 105 is still gonna burn quicker cleaner and fuller meaning more of the air fuel mixture is gonna get burnt.
this gives less hydrocarbons.
the burning process once the fuel has ignited is nothing to do with the ecu,its a burning process from then on.all the ecu is gonna do is recieve certain signals from sensors and adjust accordingly.normally adjusting injecter open time or ignition advance.
now if your running 95ron and your cars recommended 98ron you ARE going to notice a BIG difference as the ecu has made its optimum adjustments and the fuel is a better quality and higher ron.
now if your running manufacturers spec 98ron and go to 105ron you are still gonna notice a difference as the fuel is gonna burn fuller cleaner and faster.
Higher octane fuels,whist they dont burn slower, go through pre-flame changes slower than lower octane fuels. So overall time is a slower burn, hence more ignition advance and reduced knock sensitivity. They do not make more power because they burn faster.
well thats just stupid, rather than spitting your dummy and not bothering to reply prove me wrong!People ask me why i dont come on the site no more and its because of bulls**t like this really - ive used the stuff for 8 years on race cars & road cars ( inc a 172 ) and it does make a difference.
Instead of copying and pasting from google websites and then coming on here thinking you know it all go and buy some and try it. This site is full of talk and no do
Later