I believe using 93 causes too much stress on the 2.7 and is causing valves to drop and destroy the motor.
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Running joke over at ClassicBroncos.com whenever somebody asks about getting better mileage .... tow it behind a diesel truck.I asked my dealer to fill my truck up with premium before I picked it up. They said NO! They were to cheap. Said they fill all the vehicles with 87.I use premium. My 7.3 f-350 deisel dually gets better mileage.
Are you kidding, on a direct injection motor 10:1 compression is NOTHING. I might add that I ran 10 PSI of boost on an 11:1 miata motor using California winter piss-water 91 octane (which is worse than 87 octane in most other states), and that was a port injected 1.8 liter that made over 300 HP at the wheel!From what I've read, both the 2.7 and 2.3 have a 10:1 compress in ratio, which is a little high for 87 octane. You might experiment with 91 to see if your mileage or smoothness change. Your computer may very well be combating some "unnoticeable" predetonation.
MY 2.7 Tacoma has a 9.6ish compression ratio and runs noticablely better on 91.
That being said, if you live in an area where premium fuels aren't sold very much, your local peteol tank farm may very well be sending premium fuels to lower octane gas station tanks, just to cycle it out of their system.
Explain the thermodynamics behind that logic. That's f'ing hilarious. Increasing octane doesn't increase stress, period.I believe using 93 causes too much stress on the 2.7 and is causing valves to drop and destroy the motor.
In the 60s Atlantic , as ARCO, was known sold a "clear" gas when all other gasolines had a slightly brown or bronze tint. I don't recall if it was the first unleaded or just refined different but it was what you wanted for outboard motors to mix with oil (2 cycle)No. At the time the ARCO Clear was their premium gasoline. Sorry but I don’t remember the octane rating. Their jet fuel, JP4 and Jet A, was kerosine/diesel “grade”. IIRC, flash point and “gel” point were important. I remember sampling a huge tank of JP4 one night with a US Navy inspector observing…. They were very particular about what they bought.
A little bump draft and keep turning leftRunning joke over at ClassicBroncos.com whenever somebody asks about getting better mileage .... tow it behind a diesel truck.
It's no joke either!
I had a 2001 F250 PSD and it did get better mileage towing the Bronco on a trailer than the Bronco did under its own power! LOL
The Mazda Sky-active spark controlled compression ignition engines run at 14:1Are you kidding, on a direct injection motor 10:1 compression is NOTHING. I might add that I ran 10 PSI of boost on an 11:1 miata motor using California winter piss-water 91 octane (which is worse than 87 octane in most other states), and that was a port injected 1.8 liter that made over 300 HP at the wheel!
Mr. Spock! You are alive!3.75%, but point taken
It was supposed to be hilarious.... I forgot the "sarcasm" font. Lol.Explain the thermodynamics behind that logic. That's f'ing hilarious. Increasing octane doesn't increase stress, period.
Yeah if anything, it would be the other way around...knocking from poor fuel and too much timing can cause valve damageExplain the thermodynamics behind that logic. That's f'ing hilarious. Increasing octane doesn't increase stress, period.
It was supposed to be hilarious.... I forgot the "sarcasm" font. Lol.
...were the first words out of my salesman's mouth...after I took delivery of my 2DR/WT/SAS (2.7L) last week.
Can anyone tell me why?
Struck me as V E R Y odd.
Thanks!