Has anyone heard of this?

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swathdiver

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I wonder if the stations with unleaded 88 and E85 do too.
E85 is made with 85 octane gasoline at a refinery but when they blend it to make E15 or E30 and such, they use 87 from the tanks at the gas station. The problem I have found over the years, the pumps are not on or working and I get a tank full of 87 when I was supposed to get E30 or E15.
 

ks03

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I saw this at my Glock forum:


"A bit of worthless trivia. I read this on the internet so it has to be true.

A typical service station sells 87, 89, and 91 octane gasoline. They just have two underground tanks, 87, and 91. The 89 octane gas comes from both tanks and is mixed at the pump.

True or false? Anyone know?"
I doubt it’s always the case. In the 2000s in Iowa, places commonly sold 87e0, 89e10, and 91e0 and 89e10 was the least expensive. So I’d be surprised if they weren’t dealing with 3 tanks
 

Ilikemtb999

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E85 is made with 85 octane gasoline at a refinery but when they blend it to make E15 or E30 and such, they use 87 from the tanks at the gas station. The problem I have found over the years, the pumps are not on or working and I get a tank full of 87 when I was supposed to get E30 or E15.
My e85 station also has e15 and then 85/87/91. Last time I filled up they were out of 85/87/91 (single hose) but they had e15 and e85 which each have their own hose.
 

swathdiver

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My e85 station also has e15 and then 85/87/91. Last time I filled up they were out of 85/87/91 (single hose) but they had e15 and e85 which each have their own hose.
Did you check your alcohol content afterwards? I reckon there are multiple ways to store and dispense these fuels.
 
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Here in Eugene today I drove by my Chevron I use and Regular 85 was $3.70 a gallon.

It is comical how we got here, isn't it. :mad:
 

TollKeeper

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Filled up with E-0 Premium at 3.71 a gallon. This truck really likes ethanol free. 1.5-2 mpg better. And its the same price as mid-grade E-15.

Would not mind trying to see if I could do a E-85 conversion on the Esky affordably. Its $1.20 cheaper a gallon.
 

Bigkevschopshop

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I saw this at my Glock forum:


"A bit of worthless trivia. I read this on the internet so it has to be true.

A typical service station sells 87, 89, and 91 octane gasoline. They just have two underground tanks, 87, and 91. The 89 octane gas comes from both tanks and is mixed at the pump.

True or false? Anyone know?"
tRUE
 
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Saw my first $4+ a gallon price yesterday for 93 octane. I look forward to seeing just where these prices go before the end of 4 years..... :favorites68:
 

Noggles

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Filled up with E-0 Premium at 3.71 a gallon. This truck really likes ethanol free. 1.5-2 mpg better. And its the same price as mid-grade E-15.

Would not mind trying to see if I could do a E-85 conversion on the Esky affordably. Its $1.20 cheaper a gallon.

From everything I have read online flex fuel isn't worth it from a cost perspective unless you have a performance setup that actually can use the extra octane and cooling effects of ethanol. Most all street driven ls engines don't. Your mileage will drop enough that the cheaper fuel becomes more expensive and there is no performance gain for our low compression engines.
 

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