yes of course!! my 1993 corolla gli uses 97 octane
Premium gasoline is gasoline that has been blended to meet an octane rating higher than "Regular" gasoline. Higher octane gasoline contains hydrocarbon components which are more branched or have a lower hydrogen to carbon ratio than those with lower octane. In the United States the typical octane numbers, (RON+MON)/2 are as follows: Regular = 87 Plus = 89 Supreme = 93. Typical octane ratings vary in different locations and in some cases elevations.
It means the gasoline blend has a higher Octane. Use the octane that the manufacture recommends for your car. 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 will 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.
A 3vze engine will take anywhere from regular 87 octane, up to 100 octane race gas. However what is your purpose to using higher or lower octane, Using regular, plus, or premium will work well. however higher mile engines would prefer 91 octane!
8 daddy
Octane + oxygen ---> carbon dioxide + water Lulu
Plus (89 or 91 octane) will nor harm the engine or fuel system on an engine thats call for 87 octane.Plus (89 or 91 octane) will nor harm the engine or fuel system on an engine thats call for 87 octane.
Octane rating. regular is 87 plus is 89 or 91
ethanol plus gasoline
When you mix regular unleaded fuel and unleaded plus fuel in a gas tank it results in a mixture of fuel with an octane rating higher that regular unleaded fuel but lower than the octane rating of unleaded plus fuel.
no
In many cases, mileage plus will improve octane levels. However, gas usage will depend again on driving conditions, i.e., highway vs. street driving; stop-start traffic and of course short trip drives taken many times.
The difference is the octane rating, (in the USA)regular- 87 octane, plus is 89 octane and super is 91 or 93 octane depending on avail. Always use what the manufacturer recommends or higher Using a lower octane or sometime fuel from a no name gas station can cause engine Detonation/knock/pinging. This is when gas ignites by compression rather than the spark from the spark plug. Knock can(WILL) damage an engine if left unchecked, so it is not something you want to have happening. Though most new cars' ECM will adjust ignition timing if detonation is detected. The use of a higher octane fuel than required, can be a waste of money. Some newer vehicles can get better gas mileage with higher octane if the ECM will adapt to it/ depending on the vehicle(seen it mostly with pickups that haul loads). Using higher octane fuel "WILL NOT" damage the engine.