Fuel update
Author
Discussion

thesfg

Original Poster:

39 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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Hello all,

When I was getting the work done on my car yesterday, Roger at Monkfish told me I’d be using poor fuel and this had effected the car’s engine management as it had closed itself down, to protect itself against this poor fuel. I told him I only used V-Power (formerly Optimax) from Shell and he said that was the cause of it. Because of the way Shell is made, if it sits in the garage tank or your car’s tank for anything more than a day or 2, it can start to “go off” and in modern engines, they will shut themselves off to a degree to protect them from poor fuel. The reading I had done on fuel in the past, highlighted Shell’s premium as best and he reckons that in a race (F1) situation, which is where they developed this fuel from, it probably is the best. But if you’re not running the car so often or you buy fuel from an out of the way garage with not a very high turnover, then chances are the fuel will have turned. It’s only at its best if its new in both the garage and your tank.

His solution was either BP Ultimate or would you believe it, Tesco Premium. They’ve never had any issues on cars that run on BP ultimate and in his opinion (and not withstanding the refinery issue earlier this year) Tesco premium fuel. I have not used the Tesco fuel as yet, but am switching over to BP as of yesterday to keep the performance of my car at its best after the work was done on it. I will trial Tesco when I need my next tank, so probably Thursday in that case as I only filled up yesterday ;-)

_AJ_

405 posts

227 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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I knew that fuel could go 'off' to a degree, but I didn't realise that it took days rather than weeks?!! When you say 'shut down', do you mean that the ignition timing is being retarded for safety? Up to now I've also run exclusively on V-Power from shell, but may try the Tesco 99 stuff just to see what difference it makes if any. Maybe I can blame a poor performance at Pod recently on bad fuel lol.

Why is it only V-Power that's effected by this, and not other high octane fuels?

monkfish1

12,231 posts

247 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
quotequote all
For clarity; i said it backs off from the optimum setting, in the same manner as if you puyt 95ron fuel in. It doesn't "close down". Car continues to function just fine.

Edited by monkfish1 on Tuesday 12th August 12:35

crisisjez

9,209 posts

228 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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I swear by Tesco`s 99 Run V Power at a push and drive past BP.

thesfg

Original Poster:

39 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
quotequote all
Apologies to Roger, I'm not quite so technically qualified and what he states here is exactly what he told me, I just misquoted a bit.

I shall be picking up Nectar points at BP from here on out on that basis and giving Tesco a look in every once in a while I think.

Magic919

14,163 posts

224 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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I put the Tesco 99 in mine almost all the time.

tiler

693 posts

259 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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BP thumbup

harrypp

10 posts

216 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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monkfish1 said:
For clarity; i said it backs off from the optimum setting, in the same manner as if you puyt 95ron fuel in. It doesn't "close down". Car continues to function just fine.

Edited by monkfish1 on Tuesday 12th August 12:35

harrypp

10 posts

216 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
quotequote all
monkfish1 said:
For clarity; i said it backs off from the optimum setting, in the same manner as if you puyt 95ron fuel in. It doesn't "close down". Car continues to function just fine.

Edited by monkfish1 on Tuesday 12th August 12:35


Pretty ignorant about modern engine management systems, so perhaps a stupid question, but does this system automatically return to the optimum setting when you put some decent fuel in. At one time wasn't it a question of disconnecting the battery in order to restore all settings to standard? Do these cars have dual spark maps - high/low octane or again, have things moved on?
Am interested since my VXR8 developed a problem recently whilst in Spain. Started missing slightly at low revs if under load. Obviously easy enough to drive around the problem but some time later when I let the revs drop all seemed to be well and no problems subsequently. Could be many issues causing the miss but did wonder if I had picked up a rough tank of fuel and the ECU had adapted to it.
Need to get myself a scantool to see if I can find out what was going on. Any thoughts - a steep learning curve with EFILive or make do with a more basic tool? I don't really see myself modifying the car so is the full EFILive package a bit over the top?

ringram

14,701 posts

271 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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Yes it will scale up and down, they still have dual spark maps even on the vxr8. A reset will put you right back on the top one. You used to be able to change the rate of adjustment too, so it recovers faster. Ive not checked that on the latest one yet. If you want to accept all risks and mess with stuff yourself you can make high and low octane tables the same. (this is done sometimes over a limited timescale for tuning to keep variables at a minimum) Though Im not suggesting anyone does this as a matter of course.

FYI The VT/VX GTS-R HSV 300KW had both tables set to the same values from HSV off the showroom floor.

bertelli_1

2,393 posts

233 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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Quick fuel lesson - The RON number is the fuel's resistance to knock (pinking). The higher the number, the more resistance.

To get the most BHP you need to advance the spark as far as possible (the spark plug is ignited before the piston gets to the top of the cylinder) (TDC) - maximum cylinder pressure should be around 12 degrees before TDC).

If you advance the spark too far you will get knock. A higher RON fuel will allow more advance without knock and therefore more BHP. The engine is also fitted with sensors than 'hear' knock and will retard the timing to suit.

When its remapped your engine may detect knock when another loaded with the same data did not, this could be due to a number of factors but the most likely is a low grade RON - whether its 'gone off' or just a bad batch is debatable.

Tesco super is 99RON, BP Ultimate is 97, Shell Optiblah is 98. Regular unleaded is 95. BP also sell a 102RON in selected stations - you would need a custom map to take full advantage of this (and deep pockets at £2.50/litre!). Both BP and Shell contain additives that remove carbon deposits from inside the engine, give you more MPG etc etc blah blah.

Personally I use Tesco as its cheaper!


stevieturbo

17,961 posts

270 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
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So how can fuel that sits in your tank go off after a day or two...when its already sat in a tank at a filling station for days/weeks, in a big tanker for another day or so, and god knows how long at the refinery ?

ringram

14,701 posts

271 months

Tuesday 12th August 2008
quotequote all
bertelli_1 said:
To get the most BHP you need to advance the spark as far as possible (the spark plug is ignited before the piston gets to the top of the cylinder) (TDC) - maximum cylinder pressure should be around 12 degrees before TDC).
Incorrect information dude.

Spark should be set to MBT which is not the same as "as far as possible". Also max pressure should be more like 14*ATDC, NOT BTDC unless you like smashing your engine up.

Also a higher octane is not always best, it depends on where MBT is and how far from the knock point this is. If its on or over knock point then yes higher octane will help by reducing knock and allowing timing to approach MBT without knock. But on a lower compression engine designed for standard fuel higher octane is a pointless waste of money and may actually decrease performance.

hainser

227 posts

244 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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Tescos 99 ron for me, it also makes the car sound louder too (irrespective of proof from the technical boffins on this site that say it doesn't)! shoot

Gas_Man

794 posts

227 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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crisisjez said:
I swear by Tesco`s 99 Run V Power at a push and drive past BP.

Ditto,
My thinking being that 99RON from Tesco is best bang for buck, plus the turnover at Tesco is so high it should never "go off" before I get to burn it.

anonymous-user

77 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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ringram said:
bertelli_1 said:

To get the most BHP you need to advance the spark as far as possible (the spark plug is ignited before the piston gets to the top of the cylinder) (TDC) - maximum cylinder pressure should be around 12 degrees before TDC).



Incorrect information dude.

Spark should be set to MBT which is not the same as "as far as possible". Also max pressure should be more like 14*ATDC, NOT BTDC unless you like smashing your engine up.

Also a higher octane is not always best, it depends on where MBT is and how far from the knock point this is. If its on or over knock point then yes higher octane will help by reducing knock and allowing timing to approach MBT without knock. But on a lower compression engine designed for standard fuel higher octane is a pointless waste of money and may actually decrease performance.


Also, MON (Motor Octane Number) is a better measure of a fuel's resistance to knock as it is measured under more severe load (higher revs) than RON. Ordinary unleaded usually has a MON of 85 where BP 102 and Shell V Power is 90 & 86.9 respectively. Reading the numbers this way it doesn't look much different? Add to that fuel's RON/MON rating falls due to olefinic breakdown as soon as it's exposed to air, hence the reaon race fuel is kept sealed until it is put in the tank.

When your ECU detects consistent knock due to high AI temps (hot sunny day) or poor fuel it will switch to different (base) tables that pull loads of timing out to protect the engine at the expense of power, this is especially true in FI engines. It will recover..eventually.

I'm no expert but I've learned that a slightly less agressive tune that avoids knock, albeit below MBT will give good performance on regular 95 unleaded at the expense of just a few hp. It's interesting that the compression ratio of FI engines is the same as the NA ones which says to me there's little to be gained from fancy fuel in a standard car?

The guys in the USA have rubbish fuel and they still manage 600+ rwhp so in summary, stop wasting money on expensive super unleaded and spend it instead on some decent air-through-the-engine mods that really make a difference.




Edited by anonymous-user on Wednesday 13th August 09:45

ringram

14,701 posts

271 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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Yep Ive slightly retuned to run 95 octane. Should be interesting at vixpy's dyno day to see what affect if any it will have on performance. Saving a few quid per tank too.

anonymous-user

77 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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More interesting is the fact that the Gen III PCM contains a Motorola 68000 processor as used in the Amiga PC!

ads_green

838 posts

255 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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The USA is not rubbish fuel- theirs is advertised as the *average* of the RON and MON values where as ours is just the higher RON value.
It's essentially the same but our "95" is actually worse than their "93"
MON is the number you want to use for tuning.

Generally speaking the difference between 95 and 98 ron will not have any effect on NA engines. UK fuel is quite strictly tested (most bad batches are due to water getting into the storage tanks rather than the fuel itself) and you'll generally find 95 fuel not much different from 97.

The only other realy difference are the engine cleaning additives - Shell have confirmed that there are no difference in the additives accross their range (95, 97, optimax).

Edited by ads_green on Wednesday 13th August 10:18

jayrockwell

309 posts

217 months

Wednesday 13th August 2008
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Tesco's are currently giving 10p a litre off their fuel (dunno if it's countrywide or just local) so even their Premium 99RON is 114p a litre. I've been mostly using it anyway but always run an odd tank of BT ultimate or Vpower once in a while.