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- From: Bruce Hamilton <B.Hamilton@irl.cri.nz>
- Newsgroups: rec.autos.tech,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Gasoline FAQ - Part 3 of 4
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- Archive-name: autos/gasoline-faq/part3
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: 17 November 1996
- Version: 1.12
-
- Subject: 6. What do Fuel Octane ratings really indicate?
-
- 6.1 Who invented Octane Ratings?
-
- Since 1912 the spark ignition internal combustion engine's compression ratio
- had been constrained by the unwanted "knock" that could rapidly destroy
- engines. "Knocking" is a very good description of the sound heard from an
- engine using fuel of too low octane. The engineers had blamed the "knock"
- on the battery ignition system that was added to cars along with the
- electric self-starter. The engine developers knew that they could improve
- power and efficiency if knock could be overcome.
-
- Kettering assigned Thomas Midgley, Jr. to the task of finding the exact
- cause of knock [24]. They used a Dobbie-McInnes manograph to demonstrate
- that the knock did not arise from preignition, as was commonly supposed, but
- arose from a violent pressure rise *after* ignition. The manograph was not
- suitable for further research, so Midgley and Boyd developed a high-speed
- camera to see what was happening. They also developed a "bouncing pin"
- indicator that measured the amount of knock [9]. Ricardo had developed an
- alternative concept of HUCF ( Highest Useful Compression Ratio ) using a
- variable-compression engine. His numbers were not absolute, as there were
- many variables, such as ignition timing, cleanliness, spark plug position,
- engine temperature. etc.
-
- In 1927 Graham Edgar suggested using two hydrocarbons that could be produced
- in sufficient purity and quantity [11]. These were "normal heptane", that
- was already obtainable in sufficient purity from the distillation of Jeffrey
- pine oil, and " an octane, named 2,4,4-trimethyl pentane " that he first
- synthesized. Today we call it " iso-octane " or 2,2,4-trimethyl pentane. The
- octane had a high antiknock value, and he suggested using the ratio of the
- two as a reference fuel number. He demonstrated that all the commercially-
- available gasolines could be bracketed between 60:40 and 40:60 parts by
- volume heptane:iso-octane.
-
- The reason for using normal heptane and iso-octane was because they both
- have similar volatility properties, specifically boiling point, thus the
- varying ratios 0:100 to 100:0 should not exhibit large differences in
- volatility that could affect the rating test.
- Heat of
- Melting Point Boiling Point Density Vaporisation
- C C g/ml MJ/kg
- normal heptane -90.7 98.4 0.684 0.365 @ 25C
- iso octane -107.45 99.3 0.6919 0.308 @ 25C
-
- Having decided on standard reference fuels, a whole range of engines and
- test conditions appeared, but today the most common are the Research Octane
- Number ( RON ), and the Motor Octane Number ( MON ).
-
- 6.2 Why do we need Octane Ratings?
-
- To obtain the maximum energy from the gasoline, the compressed fuel-air
- mixture inside the combustion chamber needs to burn evenly, propagating out
- from the spark plug until all the fuel is consumed. This would deliver an
- optimum power stroke. In real life, a series of pre-flame reactions will
- occur in the unburnt "end gases" in the combustion chamber before the flame
- front arrives. If these reactions form molecules or species that can
- autoignite before the flame front arrives, knock will occur [21,22].
-
- Simply put, the octane rating of the fuel reflects the ability of the
- unburnt end gases to resist spontaneous autoignition under the engine test
- conditions used. If autoignition occurs, it results in an extremely rapid
- pressure rise, as both the desired spark-initiated flame front, and the
- undesired autoignited end gas flames are expanding. The combined pressure
- peak arrives slightly ahead of the normal operating pressure peak, leading
- to a loss of power and eventual overheating. The end gas pressure waves are
- superimposed on the main pressure wave, leading to a sawtooth pattern of
- pressure oscillations that create the "knocking" sound.
-
- The combination of intense pressure waves and overheating can induce piston
- failure in a few minutes. Knock and preignition are both favoured by high
- temperatures, so one may lead to the other. Under high-speed conditions
- knock can lead to preignition, which then accelerates engine destruction
- [27,28].
-
- 6.3 What fuel property does the Octane Rating measure?
-
- The fuel property the octane ratings measure is the ability of the unburnt
- end gases to spontaneously ignite under the specified test conditions.
- Within the chemical structure of the fuel is the ability to withstand
- pre-flame conditions without decomposing into species that will autoignite
- before the flame-front arrives. Different reaction mechanisms, occurring at
- various stages of the pre-flame compression stroke, are responsible for the
- undesirable, easily-autoignitable, end gases.
-
- During the oxidation of a hydrocarbon fuel, the hydrogen atoms are removed
- one at a time from the molecule by reactions with small radical species
- (such as OH and HO2), and O and H atoms. The strength of carbon-hydrogen
- bonds depends on what the carbon is connected to. Straight chain HCs such as
- normal heptane have secondary C-H bonds that are significantly weaker than
- the primary C-H bonds present in branched chain HCs like iso-octane [21,22].
-
- The octane rating of hydrocarbons is determined by the structure of the
- molecule, with long, straight hydrocarbon chains producing large amounts of
- easily-autoignitable pre-flame decomposition species, while branched and
- aromatic hydrocarbons are more resistant. This also explains why the octane
- ratings of paraffins consistently decrease with carbon number. In real life,
- the unburnt "end gases" ahead of the flame front encounter temperatures up
- to about 700C due to compression and radiant and conductive heating, and
- commence a series of pre-flame reactions. These reactions occur at different
- thermal stages, with the initial stage ( below 400C ) commencing with the
- addition of molecular oxygen to alkyl radicals, followed by the internal
- transfer of hydrogen atoms within the new radical to form an unsaturated,
- oxygen-containing species. These new species are susceptible to chain
- branching involving the HO2 radical during the intermediate temperature
- stage (400-600C), mainly through the production of OH radicals. Above 600C,
- the most important reaction that produces chain branching is the reaction of
- one hydrogen atom radical with molecular oxygen to form O and OH radicals.
-
- The addition of additives such as alkyl lead and oxygenates can
- significantly affect the pre-flame reaction pathways. Antiknock additives
- work by interfering at different points in the pre-flame reactions, with
- the oxygenates retarding undesirable low temperature reactions, and the
- alkyl lead compounds react in the intermediate temperature region to
- deactivate the major undesirable chain branching sequence [21,22].
-
- The antiknock ability is related to the "autoignition temperature" of the
- hydrocarbons. Antiknock ability is _not_ substantially related to:-
- 1. The energy content of fuel, this should be obvious, as oxygenates have
- lower energy contents, but high octanes.
- 2. The flame speed of the conventionally ignited mixture, this should be
- evident from the similarities of the two reference hydrocarbons.
- Although flame speed does play a minor part, there are many other factors
- that are far more important. ( such as compression ratio, stoichiometry,
- combustion chamber shape, chemical structure of the fuel, presence of
- antiknock additives, number and position of spark plugs, turbulence etc.)
- Flame speed does not correlate with octane.
-
- 6.4 Why are two ratings used to obtain the pump rating?
-
- The correct name for the (RON+MON)/2 formula is the "antiknock index",
- and it remains the most important quality criteria for motorists [39].
-
- The initial knock measurement methods developed in the 1920s resulted in a
- diverse range of engine test methods and conditions, many of which have been
- summarised by Campbell and Boyd [103]. In 1928 the Co-operative Fuel Research
- Committee formed a sub-committee to develop a uniform knock-testing
- apparatus and procedure. They settled on a single-cylinder, valve-in-head,
- water-cooled, variable compression engine of 3.5"bore and 4.5" stroke. The
- knock indicator was the bouncing-pin type. They selected operating conditions
- for evaluation that most closely match the current Research Method, however
- correlation trials with road octanes in the early 1930s exhibited such large
- discrepancies that conditions were changed ( higher engine speed, hot mixture
- temperature, and defined spark advance profiles ), and a new tentative ASTM
- Octane rating method was produced. This method is similar to the operating
- conditions of the current Motor Octane procedure [12,103]. Over several
- decades, a large number of alternative octane test methods appeared. These
- were variations to either the engine design, or the specified operating
- conditions [103]. During the 1950-1960s attempts were made to internationally
- standardise and reduce the number of Octane Rating test procedures.
-
- During the late 1940s - mid 1960s, the Research method became the important
- rating because it more closely represented the octane requirements of the
- motorist using the fuels/vehicles/roads then available. In the late 1960s
- German automakers discovered their engines were destroying themselves on
- long Autobahn runs, even though the Research Octane was within specification.
- They discovered that either the MON or the Sensitivity ( the numerical
- difference between the RON and MON numbers ) also had to be specified. Today
- it is accepted that no one octane rating covers all use. In fact, during
- 1994, there have been increasing concerns in Europe about the high
- Sensitivity of some commercially-available unleaded fuels.
-
- The design of the engine and vehicle significantly affect the fuel octane
- requirement for both RON and MON. In the 1930s, most vehicles would have
- been sensitive to the Research Octane of the fuel, almost regardless of the
- Motor Octane, whereas most 1990s engines have a 'severity" of one, which
- means the engine is unlikely to knock if a changes of one RON is matched by
- an equal and opposite change of MON [32]. I should note that the Research
- method was only formally approved in 1947, but used unofficially from 1942.
-
- 6.5 What does the Motor Octane rating measure?
-
- The conditions of the Motor method represent severe, sustained high speed,
- high load driving. For most hydrocarbon fuels, including those with either
- lead or oxygenates, the motor octane number (MON) will be lower than the
- research octane number (RON).
-
- Test Engine conditions Motor Octane
- Test Method ASTM D2700-92 [104]
- Engine Cooperative Fuels Research ( CFR )
- Engine RPM 900 RPM
- Intake air temperature 38 C
- Intake air humidity 3.56 - 7.12 g H2O / kg dry air
- Intake mixture temperature 149 C
- Coolant temperature 100 C
- Oil Temperature 57 C
- Ignition Advance - variable Varies with compression ratio
- ( eg 14 - 26 degrees BTDC )
- Carburettor Venturi 14.3 mm
-
- 6.6 What does the Research Octane rating measure?
-
- The Research method settings represent typical mild driving, without
- consistent heavy loads on the engine.
-
- Test Engine conditions Research Octane
- Test Method ASTM D2699-92 [105]
- Engine Cooperative Fuels Research ( CFR )
- Engine RPM 600 RPM
- Intake air temperature Varies with barometric pressure
- ( eg 88kPa = 19.4C, 101.6kPa = 52.2C )
- Intake air humidity 3.56 - 7.12 g H2O / kg dry air
- Intake mixture temperature Not specified
- Coolant temperature 100 C
- Oil Temperature 57 C
- Ignition Advance - fixed 13 degrees BTDC
- Carburettor Venturi Set according to engine altitude
- ( eg 0-500m=14.3mm, 500-1000m=15.1mm )
-
- 6.7 Why is the difference called "sensitivity"?
-
- RON - MON = Sensitivity. Because the two test methods use different test
- conditions, especially the intake mixture temperatures and engine speeds,
- then a fuel that is sensitive to changes in operating conditions will have
- a larger difference between the two rating methods. Modern fuels typically
- have sensitivities around 10. The US 87 (RON+MON)/2 unleaded gasoline is
- recommended to have a 82+ MON, thus preventing very high sensitivity fuels
- [39]. Recent changes in European gasolines has caused concern, as high
- sensitivity unleaded fuels have been found that fail to meet the 85 MON
- requirement of the EN228 European gasoline specification [106].
-
- 6.8 What sort of engine is used to rate fuels?
-
- Automotive octane ratings are determined in a special single-cylinder engine
- with a variable compression ratio ( CR 4:1 to 18:1 ) known as a Cooperative
- Fuels Research ( CFR ) engine. The cylinder bore is 82.5mm, the stroke is
- 114.3mm, giving a displacement of 612 cm3. The piston has four compression
- rings, and one oil control ring. The intake valve is shrouded. The head and
- cylinder are one piece, and can be moved up and down to obtain the desired
- compression ratio. The engines have a special four-bowl carburettor that
- can adjust individual bowl air-fuel ratios. This facilitates rapid switching
- between reference fuels and samples. A magnetorestrictive detonation sensor
- in the combustion chamber measures the rapid changes in combustion chamber
- pressure caused by knock, and the amplified signal is measured on a
- "knockmeter" with a 0-100 scale [104,105]. A complete Octane Rating engine
- system costs about $200,000 with all the services installed. Only one
- company manufactures these engines, the Waukesha Engine Division of Dresser
- Industries, Waukesha. WI 53186.
-
- 6.9 How is the Octane rating determined?
-
- To rate a fuel, the engine is set to an appropriate compression ratio that
- will produce a knock of about 50 on the knockmeter for the sample when the
- air-fuel ratio is adjusted on the carburettor bowl to obtain maximum knock.
- Normal heptane and iso-octane are known as primary reference fuels. Two
- blends of these are made, one that is one octane number above the expected
- rating, and another that is one octane number below the expected rating.
- These are placed in different bowls, and are also rated with each air-fuel
- ratio being adjusted for maximum knock. The higher octane reference fuel
- should produce a reading around 30-40, and the lower reference fuel should
- produce a reading of 60-70. The sample is again tested, and if it does not
- fit between the reference fuels, further reference fuels are prepared, and
- the engine readjusted to obtain the required knock. The actual fuel rating
- is interpolated from the knockmeter readings [104,105].
-
- 6.10 What is the Octane Distribution of the fuel?
-
- The combination of vehicle and engine can result in specific requirements
- for octane that depend on the fuel. If the octane is distributed differently
- throughout the boiling range of a fuel, then engines can knock on one brand
- of 87 (RON+MON)/2, but not on another brand. This "octane distribution" is
- especially important when sudden changes in load occur, such as high load,
- full throttle, acceleration. The fuel can segregate in the manifold, with
- the very volatile fraction reaching the combustion chamber first and, if
- that fraction is deficient in octane, then knock will occur until the less
- volatile, higher octane fractions arrive [27,28].
-
- Some fuel specifications include delta RONs, to ensure octane distribution
- throughout the fuel boiling range was consistent. Octane distribution was
- seldom a problem with the alkyl lead compounds, as the tetra methyl lead
- and tetra ethyl lead octane volatility profiles were well characterised, but
- it can be a major problem for the new, reformulated, low aromatic gasolines,
- as MTBE boils at 55C, whereas ethanol boils at 78C. Drivers have discovered
- that an 87 (RON+MON)/2 from one brand has to be substituted with an 89
- (RON+MON)/2 of another, and that is because of the combination of their
- driving style, engine design, vehicle mass, fuel octane distribution, fuel
- volatility, and the octane-enhancers used.
-
- 6.11 What is a "delta Research Octane number"?
-
- To obtain an indication of behaviour of a gasoline during any manifold
- segregation, an octane rating procedure called the Distribution Octane
- Number was used. The rating engine had a special manifold that allowed
- the heavier fractions to be separated before they reached the combustion
- chamber [27]. That method has been replaced by the "delta" RON procedure.
-
- The fuel is carefully distilled to obtain a distillate fraction that boils
- to the specified temperature, which is usually 100C. Both the parent fuel
- and the distillate fraction are rated on the octane engine using the
- Research Octane method [107]. The difference between these is the delta
- RON(100C), usually just called the delta RON. The delta RON ratings are
- not particularly relevant to engines with injectors, and are not used in
- the US.
-
- 6.12 How do other fuel properties affect octane?
-
- Several other properties affect knock. The most significant determinant of
- octane is the chemical structure of the hydrocarbons and their response to
- the addition of octane enhancing additives. Other factors include:-
- Front End Volatility - Paraffins are the major component in gasoline, and
- the octane number decreases with increasing chain length or ring size, but
- increases with chain branching. Overall, the effect is a significant
- reduction in octane if front end volatility is lost, as can happen with
- improper or long term storage. Fuel economy on short trips can be improved
- by using a more volatile fuel, at the risk of carburettor icing and
- increased evaporative emissions.
- Final Boiling Point.- Decreases in the final boiling point increase fuel
- octane. Aviation gasolines have much lower final boiling points than
- automotive gasolines. Note that final boiling points are being reduced
- because the higher boiling fractions are responsible for disproportionate
- quantities of pollutants and toxins.
- Preignition tendency - both knock and preignition can induce each other.
-
- 6.13 Can higher octane fuels give me more power?
-
- On modern engines with sophisticated engine management systems, the engine
- can operate efficiently on fuels of a wider range of octane rating, but there
- remains an optimum octane for the engine under specific driving conditions.
- Older cars without such systems are more restricted in their choice of fuel,
- as the engine can not automatically adjust to accommodate lower octane fuel.
- Because knock is so destructive, owners of older cars must use fuel that will
- not knock under the most demanding conditions they encounter, and must
- continue to use that fuel, even if they only occasionally require the octane.
-
- If you are already using the proper octane fuel, you will not obtain more
- power from higher octane fuels. The engine will be already operating at
- optimum settings, and a higher octane should have no effect on the management
- system. Your driveability and fuel economy will remain the same. The higher
- octane fuel costs more, so you are just throwing money away. If you are
- already using a fuel with an octane rating slightly below the optimum, then
- using a higher octane fuel will cause the engine management system to move to
- the optimum settings, possibly resulting in both increased power and improved
- fuel economy. You may be able to change octanes between seasons ( reduce
- octane in winter ) to obtain the most cost-effective fuel without loss of
- driveability.
-
- Once you have identified the fuel that keeps the engine at optimum settings,
- there is no advantage in moving to an even higher octane fuel. The
- manufacturer's recommendation is conservative, so you may be able to
- carefully reduce the fuel octane. The penalty for getting it badly wrong,
- and not realising that you have, could be expensive engine damage.
-
- 6.14 Does low octane fuel increase engine wear?
-
- Not if you are meeting the octane requirement of the engine. If you are not
- meeting the octane requirement, the engine will rapidly suffer major damage
- due to knock. You must not use fuels that produce sustained audible knock,
- as engine damage will occur. If the octane is just sufficient, the engine
- management system will move settings to a less optimal position, and the
- only major penalty will be increased costs due to poor fuel economy.
- Whenever possible, engines should be operated at the optimum position for
- long-term reliability. Engine wear is mainly related to design,
- manufacturing, maintenance and lubrication factors. Once the octane and
- run-on requirements of the engine are satisfied, increased octane will have
- no beneficial effect on the engine. Run-on is the tendency of an engine to
- continue running after the ignition has been switched off, and is discussed
- in more detail in Section 8.2. The quality of gasoline, and the additive
- package used, would be more likely to affect the rate of engine wear, rather
- than the octane rating.
-
- 6.15 Can I mix different octane fuel grades?
-
- Yes, however attempts to blend in your fuel tank should be carefully
- planned. You should not allow the tank to become empty, and then add 50% of
- lower octane, followed by 50% of higher octane. The fuels may not completely
- mix immediately, especially if there is a density difference. You may get a
- slug of low octane that causes severe knock. You should refill when your
- tank is half full. In general the octane response will be linear for most
- hydrocarbon and oxygenated fuels eg 50:50 of 87 and 91 will give 89.
-
- Attempts to mix leaded high octane to unleaded high octane to obtain higher
- octane are useless for most commercial gasolines. The lead response of the
- unleaded fuel does not overcome the dilution effect, thus 50:50 of 96 leaded
- and 91 unleaded will give 94. Some blends of oxygenated fuels with ordinary
- gasoline can result in undesirable increases in volatility due to volatile
- azeotropes, and some oxygenates can have negative lead responses. The octane
- requirement of some engines is determined by the need to avoid run-on, not
- to avoid knock.
-
- 6.16 What happens if I use the wrong octane fuel?
-
- If you use a fuel with an octane rating below the requirement of the engine,
- the management system may move the engine settings into an area of less
- efficient combustion, resulting in reduced power and reduced fuel economy.
- You will be losing both money and driveability. If you use a fuel with an
- octane rating higher than what the engine can use, you are just wasting
- money by paying for octane that you can not utilise. The additive packages
- are matched to the engines using the fuel, for example intake valve deposit
- control additive concentrations may be increased in the premium octane grade.
- If your vehicle does not have a knock sensor, then using a fuel with an
- octane rating significantly below the octane requirement of the engine means
- that the little men with hammers will gleefully pummel your engine to pieces.
-
- You should initially be guided by the vehicle manufacturer's recommendations,
- however you can experiment, as the variations in vehicle tolerances can
- mean that Octane Number Requirement for a given vehicle model can range
- over 6 Octane Numbers. Caution should be used, and remember to compensate
- if the conditions change, such as carrying more people or driving in
- different ambient conditions. You can often reduce the octane of the fuel
- you use in winter because the temperature decrease and possible humidity
- changes may significantly reduce the octane requirement of the engine.
-
- Use the octane that provides cost-effective driveability and performance,
- using anything more is waste of money, and anything less could result in
- an unscheduled, expensive visit to your mechanic.
-
- 6.17 Can I tune the engine to use another octane fuel?
-
- In general, modern engine management systems will compensate for fuel octane,
- and once you have satisfied the optimum octane requirement, you are at the
- optimum overall performance area of the engine map. Tuning changes to obtain
- more power will probably adversely affect both fuel economy and emissions.
- Unless you have access to good diagnostic equipment that can ensure
- regulatory limits are complied with, it is likely that adjustments may be
- regarded as illegal tampering by your local regulation enforcers. If you are
- skilled, you will be able to legally wring slightly more performance from
- your engine by using a dynamometer in conjunction with engine and exhaust gas
- analyzers and a well-designed, retrofitted, performance engine management
- chip.
-
- 6.18 How can I increase the fuel octane?
-
- Not simply, you can purchase additives, however these are not cost-effective
- and a survey in 1989 showed the cost of increasing the octane rating of one
- US gallon by one unit ranged from 10 cents ( methanol ), 50 cents (MMT),
- $1.00 ( TEL ), to $3.25 ( xylenes ) [108]. Refer to section 6.20 for a
- discussion on naphthalene ( mothballs ). It is preferable to purchase a
- higher octane fuel such as racing fuel, aviation gasolines, or methanol.
- Sadly, the price of chemical grade methanol has almost doubled during 1994.
- If you plan to use alcohol blends, ensure your fuel handling system is
- compatible, and that you only use dry gasoline by filling up early in the
- morning when the storage tanks are cool. Also ensure that the service station
- storage tank has not been refilled recently. Retailers are supposed to wait
- several hours before bringing a refilled tank online, to allow suspended
- undissolved water to settle out, but they do not always wait the full period.
-
- 6.19 Are aviation gasoline octane numbers comparable?
-
- Aviation gasolines were all highly leaded and graded using two numbers, with
- common grades being 80/87, 100/130, and 115/145 [109,110]. The first number is
- the Aviation rating ( aka Lean Mixture rating ), and the second number is the
- Supercharge rating ( aka Rich Mixture rating ). In the 1970s a new grade,
- 100LL ( low lead = 0.53mlTEL/L instead of 1.06mlTEL/L) was introduced to
- replace the 80/87 and 100/130. Soon after the introduction, there was a
- spate of plug fouling, and high cylinder head temperatures resulting in
- cracked cylinder heads [110]. The old 80/87 grade was reintroduced on a
- limited scale. The Aviation Rating is determined using the automotive Motor
- Octane test procedure, and then converted to an Aviation Number using a
- table in the method. Aviation Numbers below 100 are Octane numbers, while
- numbers above 100 are Performance numbers. There is usually only 1 - 2
- Octane units different to the Motor value up to 100, but Performance numbers
- varies significantly above that eg 110 MON = 128 Performance number.
-
- The second Avgas number is the Rich Mixture method Performance Number ( PN
- - they are not commonly called octane numbers when they are above 100 ), and
- is determined on a supercharged version of the CFR engine which has a fixed
- compression ratio. The method determines the dependence of the highest
- permissible power ( in terms of indicated mean effective pressure ) on
- mixture strength and boost for a specific light knocking setting. The
- Performance Number indicates the maximum knock-free power obtainable from a
- fuel compared to iso-octane = 100. Thus, a PN = 150 indicates that an engine
- designed to utilise the fuel can obtain 150% of the knock-limited power of
- iso-octane at the same mixture ratio. This is an arbitrary scale based on
- iso-octane + varying amounts of TEL, derived from a survey of engines
- performed decades ago. Aviation gasoline PNs are rated using variations of
- mixture strength to obtain the maximum knock-limited power in a supercharged
- engine. This can be extended to provide mixture response curves which define
- the maximum boost ( rich - about 11:1 stoichiometry ) and minimum boost
- ( weak about 16:1 stoichiometry ) before knock [110].
-
- The 115/145 grade is being phased out, but even the 100LL has more octane
- than any automotive gasoline.
-
- 6.20 Can mothballs increase octane?
-
- The legend of mothballs as an octane enhancer arose well before WWII when
- naphthalene was used as the active ingredient. Today, the majority of
- mothballs use para-dichlorobenzene in place of naphthalene, so choose
- carefully if you wish to experiment :-). There have been some concerns about
- the toxicity of para-dichlorobenzene, and naphthalene mothballs have again
- become popular. In the 1920s, typical gasoline octane ratings were 40-60
- [11], and during the 1930s and 40s, the ratings increased by approximately 20
- units as alkyl leads and improved refining processes became widespread [12].
-
- Naphthalene has a blending motor octane number of 90 [52], so the addition of
- a significant amount of mothballs could increase the octane, and they were
- soluble in gasoline. The amount usually required to appreciably increase the
- octane also had some adverse effects. The most obvious was due to the high
- melting point ( 80C ), when the fuel evaporated the naphthalene would
- precipitate out, blocking jets and filters. With modern gasolines,
- naphthalene is more likely to reduce the octane rating, and the amount
- required for low octane fuels will also create operational and emissions
- problems.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 7. What parameters determine octane requirement?
-
- 7.1 What is the Octane Number Requirement of a Vehicle?
-
- The actual octane requirement of a vehicle is called the Octane Number
- Requirement (ONR), and is determined by using series of standard octane fuels
- that can be blends of iso-octane and normal heptane ( primary reference ),
- or commercial gasolines ( full-boiling reference ). In Europe, delta RON
- (100C) fuels are also used, but seldom in the USA. The vehicle is tested
- under a wide range of conditions and loads, using decreasing octane fuels
- from each series until trace knock is detected. The conditions that require
- maximum octane are not consistent, but often are full-throttle acceleration
- from low starting speeds using the highest gear available. They can even be
- at constant speed conditions, which are usually performed on chassis
- dynamometers [27,28,111]. Engine management systems that adjust the octane
- requirement may also reduce the power output on low octane fuel, resulting
- in increased fuel consumption, and adaptive learning systems have to be
- preconditioned prior to testing. The maximum ONR is of most interest, as that
- usually defines the recommended fuel, however it is recognised that the
- general public seldom drive as severely as the testers, and so may be
- satisfied by a lower octane fuel [28].
-
- 7.2 What is the effect of Compression ratio?
-
- Most people know that an increase in Compression Ratio will require an
- increase in fuel octane for the same engine design. Increasing the
- compression ratio increases the theoretical thermodynamic efficiency of an
- engine according to the standard equation
-
- Efficiency = 1 - (1/compression ratio)^gamma-1
-
- where gamma = ratio of specific heats at constant pressure and constant
- volume of the working fluid ( for most purposes air is the working fluid,
- and is treated as an ideal gas ). There are indications that thermal
- efficiency reaches a maximum at a compression ratio of about 17:1 for
- gasoline fuels in an SI engine [23].
-
- The efficiency gains are best when the engine is at incipient knock, that's
- why knock sensors ( actually vibration sensors ) are used. Low compression
- ratio engines are less efficient because they can not deliver as much of the
- ideal combustion power to the flywheel. For a typical carburetted engine,
- without engine management [27,38]:-
-
- Compression Octane Number Brake Thermal Efficiency
- Ratio Requirement ( Full Throttle )
- 5:1 72 -
- 6:1 81 25 %
- 7:1 87 28 %
- 8:1 92 30 %
- 9:1 96 32 %
- 10:1 100 33 %
- 11:1 104 34 %
- 12:1 108 35 %
-
- Modern engines have improved significantly on this, and the changing fuel
- specifications and engine design should see more improvements, but
- significant gains may have to await improved engine materials and fuels.
-
- 7.3 What is the effect of changing the air-fuel ratio?
-
- Traditionally, the greatest tendency to knock was near 13.5:1 air-fuel
- ratio, but was very engine specific. Modern engines, with engine management
- systems, now have their maximum octane requirement near to 14.5:1. For a
- given engine using gasoline, the relationship between thermal efficiency,
- air-fuel ratio, and power is complex. Stoichiometric combustion ( air-fuel
- ratio = 14.7:1 for a typical non-oxygenated gasoline ) is neither maximum
- power - which occurs around air-fuel 12-13:1 (Rich), nor maximum thermal
- efficiency - which occurs around air-fuel 16-18:1 (Lean). The air-fuel ratio
- is controlled at part throttle by a closed loop system using the oxygen sensor
- in the exhaust. Conventionally, enrichment for maximum power air-fuel ratio
- is used during full throttle operation to reduce knocking while providing
- better driveability [38]. An average increase of 2 (R+M)/2 ON is required
- for each 1.0 increase (leaning) of the air-fuel ratio [111]. If the mixture
- is weakened, the flame speed is reduced, consequently less heat is converted
- to mechanical energy, leaving heat in the cylinder walls and head,
- potentially inducing knock. It is possible to weaken the mixture sufficiently
- that the flame is still present when the inlet valve opens again, resulting
- in backfiring.
-
- 7.4 What is the effect of changing the ignition timing?
-
- The tendency to knock increases as spark advance is increased. For an engine
- with recommended 6 degrees BTDC ( Before Top Dead Centre ) timing and 93
- octane fuel, retarding the spark 4 degrees lowers the octane requirement to
- 91, whereas advancing it 8 degrees requires 96 octane fuel [27]. It should
- be noted this requirement depends on engine design. If you advance the spark,
- the flame front starts earlier, and the end gases start forming earlier in
- the cycle, providing more time for the autoigniting species to form before
- the piston reaches the optimum position for power delivery, as determined by
- the normal flame front propagation. It becomes a race between the flame front
- and decomposition of the increasingly-squashed end gases. High octane fuels
- produce end gases that take longer to autoignite, so the good flame front
- reaches and consumes them properly.
-
- The ignition advance map is partly determined by the fuel the engine is
- intended to use. The timing of the spark is advanced sufficiently to ensure
- that the fuel-air mixture burns in such a way that maximum pressure of the
- burning charge is about 15-20 degree after TDC. Knock will occur before
- this point, usually in the late compression - early power stroke period.
- The engine management system uses ignition timing as one of the major
- variables that is adjusted if knock is detected. If very low octane fuels
- are used ( several octane numbers below the vehicle's requirement at optimal
- settings ), both performance and fuel economy will decrease.
-
- The actual Octane Number Requirement depends on the engine design, but for
- some 1978 vehicles using standard fuels, the following (R+M)/2 Octane
- Requirements were measured. "Standard" is the recommended ignition timing
- for the engine, probably a few degrees BTDC [38].
-
- Basic Ignition Timing
- Vehicle Retarded 5 degrees Standard Advanced 5 degrees
- A 88 91 93
- B 86 90.5 94.5
- C 85.5 88 90
- D 84 87.5 91
- E 82.5 87 90
-
- The actual ignition timing to achieve the maximum pressure from normal
- combustion of gasoline will depend mainly on the speed of the engine and the
- flame propagation rates in the engine. Knock increases the rate of the
- pressure rise, thus superimposing additional pressure on the normal
- combustion pressure rise. The knock actually rapidly resonates around the
- chamber, creating a series of abnormal sharp spikes on the pressure diagram.
- The normal flame speed is fairly consistent for most gasoline HCs, regardless
- of octane rating, but the flame speed is affected by stoichiometry. Note that
- the flame speeds in this FAQ are not the actual engine flame speeds. A 12:1
- CR gasoline engine at 1500 rpm would have a flame speed of about 16.5 m/s,
- and a similar hydrogen engine yields 48.3 m/s, but such engine flame speeds
- are also very dependent on stoichiometry.
-
- 7.5 What is the effect of engine management systems?
-
- Engine management systems are now an important part of the strategy to
- reduce automotive pollution. The good news for the consumer is their ability
- to maintain the efficiency of gasoline combustion, thus improving fuel
- economy. The bad news is their tendency to hinder tuning for power. A very
- basic modern engine system could monitor and control:- mass air flow, fuel
- flow, ignition timing, exhaust oxygen ( lambda oxygen sensor ), knock
- ( vibration sensor ), EGR, exhaust gas temperature, coolant temperature, and
- intake air temperature. The knock sensor can be either a nonresonant type
- installed in the engine block and capable of measuring a wide range of knock
- vibrations ( 5-15 kHz ) with minimal change in frequency, or a resonant type
- that has excellent signal-to-noise ratio between 1000 and 5000 rpm [112].
-
- A modern engine management system can compensate for altitude, ambient air
- temperature, and fuel octane. The management system will also control cold
- start settings, and other operational parameters. There is a new requirement
- that the engine management system also contain an on-board diagnostic
- function that warns of malfunctions such as engine misfire, exhaust catalyst
- failure, and evaporative emissions failure. The use of fuels with alcohols
- such as methanol can confuse the engine management system as they generate
- more hydrogen which can fool the oxygen sensor [76] .
-
- The use of fuel of too low octane can actually result in both a loss of fuel
- economy and power, as the management system may have to move the engine
- settings to a less efficient part of the performance map. The system retards
- the ignition timing until only trace knock is detected, as engine damage
- from knock is of more consequence than power and fuel economy.
-
- 7.6 What is the effect of temperature and load?
-
- Increasing the engine temperature, particularly the air-fuel charge
- temperature, increases the tendency to knock. The Sensitivity of a fuel can
- indicate how it is affected by charge temperature variations. Increasing
- load increases both the engine temperature, and the end-gas pressure, thus
- the likelihood of knock increases as load increases. Increasing the water
- jacket temperature from 71C to 82C, increases the (R+M)/2 ONR by two [111].
-
- 7.7 What is the effect of engine speed?.
-
- Faster engine speed means there is less time for the pre-flame reactions
- in the end gases to occur, thus reducing the tendency to knock. On engines
- with management systems, the ignition timing may be advanced with engine
- speed and load, to obtain optimum efficiency at incipient knock. In such
- cases, both high and low engines speeds may be critical.
-
- 7.8 What is the effect of engine deposits?
-
- A new engine may only require a fuel of 6-9 octane numbers lower than the
- same engine after 25,000 km. This Octane Requirement Increase (ORI) is due to
- the formation of a mixture of organic and inorganic deposits resulting from
- both the fuel and the lubricant. They reach an equilibrium amount because
- of flaking, however dramatic changes in driving styles can also result in
- dramatic changes of the equilibrium position. When the engine starts to burn
- more oil, the octane requirement can increase again. ORIs up to 12 are not
- uncommon, depending on driving style [27,28,32,111]. The deposits produce
- the ORI by several mechanisms:-
- - they reduce the combustion chamber volume, effectively increasing the
- compression ratio.
- - they also reduce thermal conductivity, thus increasing the combustion
- chamber temperatures.
- - they catalyse undesirable pre-flame reactions that produce end gases with
- low autoignition temperatures.
-
- 7.9 What is the Road Octane Number of a Fuel?
-
- The CFR octane rating engines do not reflect actual conditions in a vehicle,
- consequently there are standard procedures for evaluating the performance
- of the gasoline in an engine. The most common are:-
- 1. The Modified Uniontown Procedure. Full throttle accelerations are made
- from low speed using primary reference fuels. The ignition timing is
- adjusted until trace knock is detected at some stage. Several reference
- fuels are used, and a Road Octane Number v Basic Ignition timing graph is
- obtained. The fuel sample is tested, and the trace knock ignition timing
- setting is read from the graph to provide the Road Octane Number. This is
- a rapid procedure but provides minimal information, and cars with engine
- management systems require sophisticated electronic equipment to adjust
- the ignition timing [28].
- 2. The Modified Borderline Knock Procedure. The automatic spark advance is
- disabled, and a manual adjustment facility added. Accelerations are
- performed as in the Modified Uniontown Procedure, however trace knock is
- maintained throughout the run by adjustment of the spark advance. A map
- of ignition advance v engine speed is made for several reference fuels
- and the sample fuels. This procedure can show the variation of road octane
- with engine speed, however the technique is almost impossible to perform
- on vehicles with modern management systems [28].
-
- The Road Octane Number lies between the MON and RON, and the difference
- between the RON and the Road Octane number is called 'depreciation" [111].
- Because nominally-identical new vehicle models display octane requirements
- that can range over seven numbers, a large number of vehicles have to be
- tested [28,111].
-
- 7.10 What is the effect of air temperature?
-
- An increase in ambient air temperature of 5.6C increases the octane
- requirement of an engine by 0.44 - 0.54 MON [27,38]. When the combined effects
- of air temperature and humidity are considered, it is often possible to use
- one octane grade in summer, and use a lower octane rating in winter. The
- Motor octane rating has a higher charge temperature, and increasing charge
- temperature increases the tendency to knock, so fuels with low Sensitivity
- ( the difference between RON and MON numbers ) are less affected by air
- temperature.
-
- 7.11 What is the effect of altitude?
-
- The effect of increasing altitude may be nonlinear, with one study reporting
- a decrease of the octane requirement of 1.4 RON/300m from sea level to 1800m
- and 2.5 RON/300m from 1800m to 3600m [27]. Other studies report the octane
- number requirement decreased by 1.0 - 1.9 RON/300m without specifying
- altitude [38]. Modern engine management systems can accommodate this
- adjustment, and in some recent studies, the octane number requirement was
- reduced by 0.2 - 0.5 (R+M)/2 per 300m increase in altitude.
- The larger reduction on older engines was due to:-
- - reduced air density provides lower combustion temperature and pressure.
- - fuel is metered according to air volume, consequently as density decreases
- the stoichiometry moves to rich, with a lower octane number requirement.
- - manifold vacuum controlled spark advance, and reduced manifold vacuum
- results in less spark advance.
-
- 7.12 What is the effect of humidity?.
-
- An increase of absolute humidity of 1.0 g water/kg of dry air lowers the
- octane requirement of an engine by 0.25 - 0.32 MON [27,28,38].
-
- 7.13 What does water injection achieve?.
-
- Water injection, as a separate liquid or emulsion with gasoline, or as a
- vapour, has been thoroughly researched. If engines can calibrated to operate
- with small amounts of water, knock can be suppressed, hydrocarbon emissions
- will slightly increase, NOx emissions will decrease, CO does not change
- significantly, and fuel and energy consumption are increased [113].
-
- Water injection was used in WWII aviation engine to provide a large increase
- in available power for very short periods. The injection of water does
- decrease the dew point of the exhaust gases. This has potential corrosion
- problems. The very high specific heat and heat of vaporisation of water
- means that the combustion temperature will decrease. It has been shown that
- a 10% water addition to methanol reduces the power and efficiency by about
- 3%, and doubles the unburnt fuel emissions, but does reduce NOx by 25% [114].
- A decrease in combustion temperature will reduce the theoretical maximum
- possible efficiency of an otto cycle engine that is operating correctly,
- but may improve efficiency in engines that are experiencing abnormal
- combustion on existing fuels.
-
- Some aviation SI engines still use boost fluids. The water-methanol mixtures
- are used to provide increased power for short periods, up to 40% more -
- assuming adequate mechanical strength of the engine. The 40/60 or 45/55
- water-methanol mixtures are used as boost fluids for aviation engines because
- water would freeze. Methanol is just "preburnt" methane, consequently it only
- has about half the energy content of gasoline, but it does have a higher heat
- of vaporisation, which has a significant cooling effect on the charge.
- Water-methanol blends are more cost-effective than gasoline for combustion
- cooling. The high Sensitivity of alcohol fuels has to be considered in the
- engine design and settings.
-
- Boost fluids are used because they are far more economical than using the
- fuel. When a supercharged engine has to be operated at high boost, the
- mixture has to be enriched to keep the engine operating without knock. The
- extra fuel cools the cylinder walls and the charge, thus delaying the onset
- of knock which would otherwise occur at the associated higher temperatures.
-
- The overall effect of boost fluid injection is to permit a considerable
- increase in knock-free engine power for the same combustion chamber
- temperature. The power increase is obtained from the higher allowable boost.
- In practice, the fuel mixture is usually weakened when using boost fluid
- injection, and the ratio of the two fuel fluids is approximately 100 parts
- of avgas to 25 parts of boost fluid. With that ratio, the resulting
- performance corresponds to an effective uprating of the fuel of about 25%,
- irrespective of its original value. Trying to increase power boosting above
- 40% is difficult, as the engine can drown because of excessive liquid [110].
-
- Note that for water injection to provide useful power gains, the engine
- management and fuel systems must be able to monitor the knock and adjust
- both stoichiometry and ignition to obtain significant benefits. Aviation
- engines are designed to accommodate water injection, most automobile engines
- are not. Returns on investment are usually harder to achieve on engines that
- do not normal extend their performance envelope into those regions. Water
- injection has been used by some engine manufacturers - usually as an
- expedient way to maintain acceptable power after regulatory emissions
- baggage was added to the engine, but usually the manufacturer quickly
- produces a modified engine that does not require water injection.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 8. How can I identify and cure other fuel-related problems?
-
- 8.1 What causes an empty fuel tank?
-
- * You forgot to refill it.
- * Your friendly neighbourhood thief "borrowed" the gasoline - the unfriendly
- one took the vehicle.
- * The fuel tank leaked.
- * Your darling child/wife/husband/partner/mother/father used the car.
- * The most likely reason is that your local garage switched to an oxygenated
- gasoline, and the engine management system compensated for the oxygen
- content, causing the fuel consumption to increase ( although the effect on
- well tuned engines is only 2-4% ).
-
- 8.2 Is knock the only abnormal combustion problem?
-
- No. Many of the abnormal combustion problems are induced by the same
- conditions, and so one can lead to another.
-
- Preignition occurs when the air-fuel mixture is ignited prematurely by
- glowing deposits or hot surfaces - such as exhaust valves and spark plugs.
- If it continues, it can increase in severity and become Run-away Surface
- Ignition (RSI) which prevents the combustion heat being converted into
- mechanical energy, thus rapidly melting pistons. The Ricardo method uses an
- electrically-heated wire in the engine to measure preignition tendency. The
- scale uses iso-octane as 100 and cyclohexane as 0.
- Some common fuel components:-
- paraffins 50-100
- benzene 26
- toluene 93
- xylene >100
- cyclopentane 70
- di-isobutylene 64
- hexene-2 -26
-
- There is no direct correlation between antiknock ability and preignition
- tendency, however high combustion chamber temperatures favour both, and so
- one may lead to the other. An engine knocking during high-speed operation
- will increase in temperature and that can induce preignition, and conversely
- any preignition will result in higher temperatures than may induce knock.
-
- Misfire is commonly caused by either a failure in the ignition system, or
- fouling of the spark plug by deposits. The most common cause of deposits
- was the alkyl lead additives in gasoline, and the yellow glaze of various
- lead salts was used by mechanics to assess engine tune. From the upper
- recess to the tip, the composition changed, but typical compounds ( going
- from cold to hot ) were PbClBr; 2PbO.PbClBr; PbO.PbSO4; 3Pb3(PO4)2.PbClBr.
-
- Run-on is the tendency of an engine to continue running after the ignition
- has been switched off. It is usually caused by the spontaneous ignition of
- the fuel-air mixture, rather than by surface ignition from hotspots or
- deposits, as commonly believed. The narrow range of conditions for
- spontaneous ignition of the fuel-air mixture ( engine speed, charge
- temperature, cylinder pressure ) may be created when the engine is switched
- off. The engine may refire, thus taking the conditions out of the critical
- range for a couple of cycles, and then refire again, until overall cooling
- of the engine drops it out of the critical region. The octane rating of the
- fuel is the appropriate parameter, and it is not rare for an engine to
- require a higher Octane fuel to prevent run-on than to avoid knock [27,28].
- Obviously, engines with fuel injection systems do not have the problem, and
- idle speed is an important factor. Later model carburettors have an idle
- stop solenoid which partially closes the throttle blades when the ignition
- key was off, and thus ( if set correctly ) prevents run-on.
-
- 8.3 Can I prevent carburetter icing?
-
- Yes, carburettor icing is caused by the combination of highly volatile fuel,
- high humidity and low ambient temperature. The extent of cooling, caused by
- the latent heat of the vaporised gasoline in the carburettor, can be as much
- as 20C, perhaps dropping below the dew point of the charge. If this happens,
- water will condense on the cooler carburettor surfaces, and will freeze if
- the temperature is low enough. The fuel volatility can not always be reduced
- to eliminate icing, so anti-icing additives are used. In the US, anti-icing
- additives are seldom required because of the widespread use heated intake
- air and fuel injection [28].
-
- Two types of additive are added to gasoline to inhibit icing:-
- - surfactants that form a monomolecular layer over the metal parts that
- inhibits ice crystal formation. These are usually added at concentrations
- of 30-150 ppm.
- - cryoscopic additives that depress the freezing point of the condensed water
- so that it does not turn to ice. Alcohols ( methanol, iso-propyl alcohol,
- etc. ) and glycols ( hexylene glycol, dipropylene glycol ) are used at
- concentrations of 0.03% - 1%.
-
- If you have icing problems, the addition of 100-200mls of alcohol to a full
- tank of dry gasoline will prevent icing under moderately-cold conditions.
- If you believe there is a small amount of water in the fuel tank, add 500mls
- of anhydrous isopropyl alcohol as the first treatment, and isopropyl
- alcohol is also preferred for more severe conditions. Oxygenated gasolines
- using alcohols can also be used. It's important to ensure the alcohol is
- anhydrous, as some grades contain up to 30% water.
-
- 8.4 Should I store fuel to avoid the oxygenate season?
-
- No. The fuel will be from a different season, and will have significantly
- different volatility properties that may induce driveability problems. You
- can tune your engine to perform on oxygenated gasoline as well as it did on
- traditional gasoline, however you will have increased fuel consumption due
- to the useless oxygen in the oxygenates. Some engines may not initially
- perform well on some oxygenated fuels, usually because of the slightly
- different volatility and combustion characteristics. A good mechanic should
- be able to recover any lost performance or driveability, providing the engine
- is in reasonable condition.
-
- 8.5 Can I improve fuel economy by using quality gasolines?
-
- Yes, several manufacturers have demonstrated that their new gasoline additive
- packages are more effective than traditional gasoline formulations. Texaco
- claimed their new vapour-phase fuel additive can reduce existing deposits by
- up to 30%, improve fuel economy, and reduce NOx tailpipe emissions by 15%,
- when compared to other advanced liquid phase additives [49]. The advertising
- claims have been successfully disputed in court by Chevron - who demonstrated
- that their existing fuel additive already offered similar benefits. Other
- reputable gasoline manufacturers will have similar additive packages in their
- premium quality gasolines [50]. Quality gasolines, of whatever octane
- ratings, will include a full range of gasoline additives designed to provide
- consistent fuel quality.
-
- Note that oxygenated gasolines must decrease fuel economy for the same power.
- If your engine is initially well-tuned on hydrocarbon gasolines, the
- stoichiometry will move to lean, and maximum power is slightly rich, so
- either the management system ( if you have one ) or your mechanic has to
- increase the fuel flow. The minor improvements in combustion efficiency that
- oxygenates may provide, can not compensate for 2+% of oxygen in the fuel
- that will not provide energy.
-
- 8.6 What is "stale" fuel, and should I use it?
-
- "Stale" fuel is caused by improper storage, and usually smells sour. The
- gasoline has been allowed to get warm, thus catalysing olefin decomposition
- reactions, and perhaps also losing volatile material in unsealed containers.
- Such fuel will tend to rapidly form gums, and will usually have a significant
- reduction in octane rating. The fuel can be used by blending with twice the
- volume of new gasoline, but the blended fuel should be used immediately,
- otherwise teh old fuel will catalyse rapid decomposition of the new,
- resulting in even larger quantities of stale fuel. Some stale fuels can drop
- several octane numbers, so be generous with the dilution.
-
- 8.7 How can I remove water in the fuel tank?
-
- If you only have a small quantity of water, then the addition of 500mls of
- dry isopropanol (IPA) to a near-full 30-40 litre tank will absorb the water,
- and will not significantly affect combustion. Once you have mopped up the
- water with IPA, small, regular doses of any anhydrous alcohol will help
- keep the tank dry. This technique will not work if you have very large
- amounts of water, and the addition of greater amounts of IPA may result in
- poor driveability.
-
- Water in fuel tanks can be minimised by keeping the fuel tank near full, and
- filling in the morning from a service station that allows storage tanks to
- stand for several hours after refilling before using the fuel. Note that
- oxygenated gasolines have greater water solubility, and should cope with
- small quantities of water.
-
- 8.8 Can I used unleaded on older vehicles?
-
- Yes, providing the octane is appropriate. There are some older engines that
- cut the valve seats directly into the cylinder head ( eg BMC minis ). The
- absence of lead, which lubricated the valve seat, causes the very hard
- oxidation products of the exhaust valve to wear down the seat. This valve
- seat recession is usually corrected by installing seat inserts, hardening
- the seats, or use of specific valve seat recession protection additives
- ( such as Valvemaster ). Most other problems arise because the fuels have
- different volatility, or the reduction of combustion chamber deposits.
- These can usually be cured by reference to the vehicle manufacturer, who
- will probably have a publication with the changes. Some vehicles will
- perform as well on unleaded with a slightly lower octane than recommended
- leaded fuel, due to the significant reduction in deposits from modern
- unleaded gasolines. If premium unleaded petrol containing relatively
- high levels of aromatics is used, some carburetted engines from the 1960s
- may experience spark plug fouling, however most vehicle manufacturers
- have guides to ensure careful engine tuning will eliminate most of the
- problem.
-