Super/Premium Diesel - Worth It?
Super/Premium Diesel - Worth It?
Author
Discussion

paddyhasneeds

Original Poster:

59,184 posts

226 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
Looking at changing from a petrol to a diesel so of course I'm looking at potential fuel costs.

My current car recommends minimum 97 RON so if you go off what the manual says, which I do as they made the thing, that means V-Power.

What's the score with diesel and RON (or equivalent) please? I've never had a diesel so I've never paid much attention but I notice there's "Standard" diesel and there's "Premium" and V-Power and so on.

MondeoMan1981

2,444 posts

199 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
V Power / Ultimate etc diesels contain more cetanes I think.

V Power makes a great difference to mine, smoother and quicker through the rev range, I can change up sooner and its mildly more economical.

Meanwhile, Shell Fuelsave makes it sound like a bigger bag of nails, slower, have to hold gears a fair bit longer.

chopper602

2,292 posts

239 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
paddyhasneeds said:
Looking at changing from a petrol to a diesel so of course I'm looking at potential fuel costs.

My current car recommends minimum 97 RON so if you go off what the manual says, which I do as they made the thing, that means V-Power.
Never heard of a diesel requiring a specific spec. of diesel (unlike petrol)

Superhoop

4,768 posts

209 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
Filled mine up with Shell V power diesel a few weeks ago after a bloody long day behind the wheel, and though oh bks....

I have to say though, throttle response was definitely better, and got an extra 40 or so miles from the tank - almost worth paying the extra I'd say

to3m

1,228 posts

186 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
I used V-Power diesel for about 10 months in my car (BMW 320d from 2001) and my spreadsheet suggests that it was, in general, maybe a teeny bit more efficient for the sort of driving I generally used to do - stop start commute through town, average less than 20mph. Didn't make much difference for motorway driving.

(This was basically what I'd previously found when switching from Tesco/Esso to normal Shell - nasty town driving efficiency improved a little bit, motorway driving exactly the same.)

The results don't permit any stronger conclusion than that though!

Perhaps the car smoked a bit less, though, and maybe sounded a bit better, and revved a bit more freely? I remember thinking all of that at the time. I'm not convinced, though! - it's a year since I ended my V-Power experiment, and if the car drives any worse then it's not especially noticeable. Certainly not worth the price/lack of clubcard points/etc.

volvoforlife

724 posts

179 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
to3m said:
I used V-Power diesel for about 10 months in my car (BMW 320d from 2001) and my spreadsheet suggests that it was, in general, maybe a teeny bit more efficient for the sort of driving I generally used to do - stop start commute through town, average less than 20mph. Didn't make much difference for motorway driving.

(This was basically what I'd previously found when switching from Tesco/Esso to normal Shell - nasty town driving efficiency improved a little bit, motorway driving exactly the same.)

The results don't permit any stronger conclusion than that though!

Perhaps the car smoked a bit less, though, and maybe sounded a bit better, and revved a bit more freely? I remember thinking all of that at the time. I'm not convinced, though! - it's a year since I ended my V-Power experiment, and if the car drives any worse then it's not especially noticeable. Certainly not worth the price/lack of clubcard points/etc.
Same experience for me in petrol cars. Using V-Power stuff or whatever else 97+ RON rated made no difference and in some cases it was worse than 95 RON.

collateral

7,238 posts

234 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
Probably depends on the engine. I'd guess smarter ECUs can fiddle with all sorts of timing.

It's not worth it in all petrols - my manual pretty much says 'you can use premium but there's no reason to'

MattOz

3,975 posts

280 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
My 330cd does go slightly better on V-Power diesel. It costs about £3 a fill more to use it over regular diesel, but I'd consider it worthwhile. Less smoke and about 40-50 miles further on the tankful is an added bonus. I used some super dooper diesel in Germany earlier this year and it was even better. Can't remember what it was called though and it was over £1.50 a litre! eek

jsg612

571 posts

184 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
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I've used Super Unleaded in all of my previous vehicles, some being higher performance and requiring the benefits, some not at all. I've recently taken the plunge to buy a brand new diseasal and haven't even considered using Super Diesel in it, although it is available at my 'regular' Total filling station.

Maybe I should try it? Will be good to hear from a few others who have.

HellDiver

5,708 posts

198 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
Premium diesel (BP Ultimate is the only one you can get here in N. Ireland) helped on my remapped Astra (200hp remapped 1.9CDTI). It ran badly, very badly on supermarket diesel, and was quite smokey on standard BP diesel. Only way to run it on Tesco diesel was to add two shots of Millers diesel additive.

FranKinFezza

1,073 posts

195 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
"modern" diesels with common rail injection and clever ECU's may well benefit
from VPD and other premium diesel fuel but in old school engines you probably
wont notice much difference.

My experience with a 200DTI landy was a very small improvement in power
and an even smaller improvement in MPG with VPD and was not worth the cost.

As a comparison i had a much more noticable "improvement" running pre heated
veg oil regular diesel mix at a 50/50 blend.

paddyhasneeds

Original Poster:

59,184 posts

226 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
Interesting and thanks all so far. What I was getting at is that, say, v-power petrol claims more detergents and (obviously) more octane.

The v-power diesel page only seems to indicate it cleans your engine more/better rather than it being a higher "whatever the diesel equivalent of octane is".

collateral

7,238 posts

234 months

Tuesday 28th December 2010
quotequote all
paddyhasneeds said:
Interesting and thanks all so far. What I was getting at is that, say, v-power petrol claims more detergents and (obviously) more octane.

The v-power diesel page only seems to indicate it cleans your engine more/better rather than it being a higher "whatever the diesel equivalent of octane is".
That makes it sound like you'd be better off chucking some injection cleaner in the tank now and then, instead of getting bent over every time you fill up.

I'd say if you are looking at derv for the saving in fuel you probably aren't going to care that 'it sounds a bit nicer'. Guess it comes down to if there is any/size of improvement to mpg

Horns

323 posts

179 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
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Petrol - worth it for a small minority of cars. I use super in mine, because I don't want to grenade the engine when I give it some beans.

Diesel - snake oil, in my opinion. I run mine on anything out of a black pump.

175gt

336 posts

179 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
quotequote all
Especially so during the recent cold snap, my engine is noticeably quieter on start-up/idle when running on BP Ultimate diesel than the usual regular Shell I put in.

FamilyDub

3,587 posts

181 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
quotequote all
Smarter ECU's, or more powerful cars it might be worth looking into?

However in some boggo, or low-powered cars, it would not be worth it - this is opinion, not fact though.

While it's not diesel, I run 99RON fuel and it does makes a tangible difference to the overall economy of my car - + 4-5 mpg - and it seems to 'pick-up' from low revs better too.

paddyhasneeds

Original Poster:

59,184 posts

226 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
quotequote all
Let's assume a brand new car/brand new diesel engine. I'm still not clear what a premium diesel has in it to make it premium other than cleaning additives?

redtwin

7,518 posts

198 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
quotequote all
Thats about it I think.

When I ran a 330d I couldn't tell much difference between Branded premium diesel and Asda's finest.

I did notice smoother running when using Millers additive, but I didn't notice any significant MPG improvement.

If I was buying a new diesel car tomorrow Asda (or whichever main retailer was cheapest) would be where I filled up.

nottyash

4,671 posts

211 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
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Actually Bio diesel has a higher Cetane value than regular diesel therefore if you remap a car on it you can achieve higher gains.

entwisi

728 posts

207 months

Wednesday 29th December 2010
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I've found I get 30-40 miles more out of Esso diesel than Shell Fuelsave in the Honda Accord CDTI. I tried using Redex diesel additive for a couple of months and it made sod all difference. V power ditto over the esso so as my local Esso is 4p/l cheaper than shell fuelsave I'll happily stick with that.