Gordon, I am fully aware of fueling strategies and the wonder (lol) of knock sensing.
Ok since we all need to know a bit more,
2 fuels rated at 98 RON only have 1 thing in common, resistance to knock.
The 2 fuels can be very, very different in regards to consumption, response and power output.
A higher octance fuel can provide more power if theres a way that the higher octance fuel can be made use of. Even then its only an issue when knock is apparent.
Its simply foolish to say a car at 100% throttle, lightly loaded but accelerating will automatically do so quicker on 98 RON than 90 RON.
RON is regarded as a better indicator of a cars part throttle nknock resistance whereas MON (moto octance number) is a far better indicator of fuel throttle knock resistance.
To find out a fuels RON and MON numbers an single cylinder engine is used. It is calibrated with 2 pure fuels and then the test petrol.
The engine for the RON test has an inlet air temp of 65.6 deg c, engine coolant jacket temp of 100 deg c and the engine rpm is 600rpm.
The same engine for the MON test has an inlet air temp of 148.9 deg c, coolant jacket temp of 100 deg c and the engine runs at 900rpm.
The 2 calibration substances are mixed to match the blend of the fuel being tested. If the blend was 95% and then 5% of the other substance match the test fuel its 95 octane.
Good time to mention the american fuel, go to the pump and it may say 94 PON (pump octane number), the PON is worked out by adding the RON and MON together an dividing. 94 PON is actually 98 RON and 90 MON, so low octane yank juice as most europeans believe is a load of pish.
The difference between the MON and RON is the fuel sensitivity. A high RON number (say 100) but low MON number (say 90) would mean the fuel will act under heavy load or in a forced induction engine as a 90 octane fuel.
The fuels sensitivity can vary greatly. The RON may always be 98 but the mon could vary from 85 - 95 depending on additives used, the way it was stored and the quality of the crude that was cracked.
Avgas and other aviation fuels obviously run on higher than 100% pure substance mixtures, how is it made over 100%? They add lead to it.
Anyway this should give a basic insight into it and will show that 98 is NOT automatically better than normal 95 RON. theres lots more to it but its gets anal and is mostly about safe fual handling whch varies with the season btw.