swathdiver
Full Access Member
The OP has a direct injected engine. Many years ago I challenged @Miami-Dade to run higher octane fuel in his Tahoe and he accepted the challenge and proved me wrong! My contention was that higher octane fuel delivered better fuel mileage. Well, not in a direct injected engine!
For 40 years I'd been proving in carbureted and fuel injected engines that higher octane fuel does increase efficiency, from lawn mowers, generators, Ford Fiestas, Pontiac minivans to Gen IV LS engines. Then Gary showed me that the new direct injected engines were so efficient that they didn't need or benefit from the more expensive fuel.
My father runs 89 in his turbocharged and direct-injected 2023 Kia Sorento. He said it makes more power and gets more range compared with 87.
I was running a long term test on 93 comparing different brands of fuel but paused it to run E85 since late 2024!
For 40 years I'd been proving in carbureted and fuel injected engines that higher octane fuel does increase efficiency, from lawn mowers, generators, Ford Fiestas, Pontiac minivans to Gen IV LS engines. Then Gary showed me that the new direct injected engines were so efficient that they didn't need or benefit from the more expensive fuel.
My father runs 89 in his turbocharged and direct-injected 2023 Kia Sorento. He said it makes more power and gets more range compared with 87.
I was running a long term test on 93 comparing different brands of fuel but paused it to run E85 since late 2024!
