intheburbs
Full Access Member
6.2L can & does run on 87. The motor dials things back to accommodate the loss of energy being supplied vs demand.
“IF” you’re running 87 towing, under load (hills), taxing the motor w/ in high temps or speed, your normal margin of safety gone.
My folks can’t fathom paying for premium fuel. It’s something that truly upsets them. They feel premium fuel is a rip off. Because of that, they only purchase vehicles made to run on 87 here in Cali.
I have another buddy that feels the same way but also felt that his wife’s Lexus RX300 was ok to run on 87 driving up to 6k mountain roads w/ heavy loads. When the alternator bearing went out the dealer offered them $10k+ toward a RX350 on trade. They laughed and said jay fix the alternator. The dealer let them know they prolly had a cracked piston. They did.
If you don’t want to pay for premium fuel, no biggie. Just don’t purchase a premium fuel (recommended) vehicle and run 87. The road you’ll go down may be expensive. It’s a roll of the dice.
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There's no "loss of energy" between 87 and 91/93 octane. Both grades of fuel have the same amount of energy per gallon. The only difference in how easily the fuel burns/detonates. 87 burns/detonates faster and at lower pressures. The 5.3 has a compression ratio of about 9.5:1. 87 octane runs fine in these engines. The L9H 6.2 in my Denali has a 10.5:1 compression ratio. Anything over 10:1 is generally considered to be high compression. This means the air/fuel mixture is subjected to higher pressures, and the ideal gas law states that as the volume goes down (it's compressed more), the pressure and temperature go up. A low-octane gas might get so hot under that higher compression that it ignites before the spark plug fires, and then the "wave front" of the explosion crashes into the piston as it approaches the top of its stroke. That's the knock/ping you hear, and as you described in the Lexus, that's what leads to cracked pistons.
There's no "safety margin" when you're talking about octane. If you're running low-octane gas in a high-compression engine, you're "hoping" the knock sensors and the computer can adjust the fuel mixture to eliminate/reduce the knock. But it's not instant, and the owner's manual says you may hear a "slight" knock. To me, that's unacceptable. I'm not going to trust those systems to prevent damage to the engine. Instead, I'll feed it the gas it was designed for. Running lower-than-recommended octane gas in a high-compression engine will cause damage. Period.
And up in the mountains, at 6,000 feet, the reduced oxygen levels in the air actually cause gas to behave like it has higher octane. That's why regular gas in Denver is 85 octane, and premium is 91. The thinner air effectively increases the octane of the gas by about two points, so 85 in Denver behaves like 87 at sea level.