Normally it would be the Knock sensor and ecu that retarded
the ignition until there was no pinking.
John
I use 98 and even 101 petrol all the time and believe me there's a big difference in how the engine reacts. Sharper acceleration, sharper engine response and noticeably more power.![]()
Yeah yeah, I forgot to mention the economy. Mine doesn't go down by a liter but more of a .5 liter/100 km. Instead of 7.4 I may be able to reach 6.7-6.8. I can only get 6.2 or even 5.8 if I never go over 100 km/h and rarely stop for anything, but nevertheless, mine is a 1.8 so I should expect a difference.I use 98 aswell, and the car uses less fuel pr. km. If I run 95 on a 350 km trip, I average at 6.8-7.0l / 10 km (full car). The same trip on 98 octane average at 6.2-6.4l / 10 km (full car).
LPG has a RON (Research Octane Rating) of 110, but I don't feel any performance or milage gainsI think it's the calorific value that matters, as Morty already said RON simply descripbes the tendency of Gasoline, Petrol etc to self ignite during compression. 98, 95 and 100 RON gasoline has almost the same calorific value, so it's doubtful you would have better milage or power...
... I still see LPG as containing a higher burn rate than petrol or diesel...
Yeah yeah, I forgot to mention the economy. Mine doesn't go down by a liter but more of a .5 liter/100 km. Instead of 7.4 I may be able to reach 6.7-6.8. I can only get 6.2 or even 5.8 if I never go over 100 km/h and rarely stop for anything, but nevertheless, mine is a 1.8 so I should expect a difference.![]()
using different RON fuels will hinder the engines performance, smaller RONs the flame front will advance across the cylinder at a slower speed so the piston will be moving down as the flame front advances to the 'optimal' position.
It's not many years since we got 100 km/h allowed for some roads in Norway, and they are very few. 100 km/h (as you say) seems to be the 1.6 engine's magic limit as well regarding fuel economy.
Anyway, the same trip with our Dethleffs caravan, easily reaches 12 l/100 km.So much for environmental friendly driving.
Everyone knows that LPG is a lot worse than gasoline. You are right it's not just the RON that matters but it's a much more complicated ecuation in mixtures that would give the petrol more power. We have a lot of taxis in Bucharest that run on LPG, their cars are pathetically slow. (1.4 or 1.6 Dacia Logan). You should check out "Heat of Combustion" on Wiki to see what really gives the engine power.
You can go hydrogen, no problem, just find a bottle holding a pressure of 1000 times atmospheric pressure - the engine runs fine on pure hydrogen .. and you'll also need some hydrogen of courseThere are no CNG filling station in Romania so yes it is LPG. But anyway, I wouldn't do it because the can occupies a lot of the boot space and I hate that. There were Stilos with built in LPG support but I haven't personally seen any of them.
I would go for electric of hidrogen powered cars in the future if I have the dough for it. Gas prices are ridiculous and personally I'm sick and tired of seeing cleaner and cleaner cars when we could all just use an alternative which is much much better. Fossil fuel will be a thing of the written as one of the world biggest environmental mistakes in the history books, although I did help build all those nice arab cities.
Anyway, checking youtube for charts between petrol and lpg they are kind of the same so I guess we should all convert.![]()
I wanted to show you the chart of the Viale systems which inject ice cold LPG in liquid state and run much better than any petrol and cool the valves better than anythingAnyway, checking youtube for charts between petrol and lpg they are kind of the same so I guess we should all convert.![]()
Y As for the boot space I have mine fitted in place of my spare wheel, so the boot stays the same, the filler is in next to the petrol cap, so you can't tell it's been converted.
Back to the topic: I think @Richy best described what's the difference in engine operation between the different RON ratings.
The conversion costed ~700 Euro: http://www.landi.it/layout.jsp?idz=60173&idtp=165&lang=3&idprodotto=6 That was the best and most expensive one for a 4 cylinder engineHow much did you pay for the conversion? I have a space saving spare wheel which is brand new, was never used from 2002 until now, so I guess it's safe to say I can remove it and go for the cheaper alternative.
Also, how does this affect the MPG from the board computer? Does it always say you are doing a gazillion km/l or it works just fine but you always have the same amount of petrol in the car regardless of how much you drive it?
I'm sorry for being offtopic here maybe somebody could move this conversation to a new thread so we can discuss it there![]()