Monday, April 13, 2015

Piston Slap: What makes Premium Fuel More Expensive?

 

Just the long and short of it. (photo courtesy: chemistryland.com)

TTAC Commentator sastexan writes:

Sajeev,

I've been driving cars requiring premium fuel (91+ octane). When I bought my Contour SVT in 1998, high test was $0.20 more a gallon (just under a 20% premium over regular). But it was regularly always only $0.20 more. In the past decade or so, I noticed the delta going to $0.30 and even more. The correlation did not seem to be to the price (eg, premium did not seem to track a consistent 15% increase). Rather, the difference appears to be a flat rate.

Question for the best and brightest – what in higher octane fuel makes it more expensive?

What inputs are there and how much more does it cost to manufacture?

This is not intended to be a debate about the "requirement" for premium – my SVT had an extreme dislike of 87 octane and I won't try it in my FRS with the high compression engine. However my mother runs 87 in her  with no issue for the past 5 years despite the assertion from the salesman that the "premium product requires premium fuel" and did the same for her old I30 for 14 years (Camry engine and Maxima engine, respectively).

Sajeev answers:

I'm far from an oil and gas expert, but let's hyperlink to relevant sources and give it the 'ol college try.

What makes premium fuel more expensive is the effort to adjust the ratio of long to short chain hydrocarbons in grades of gasoline. A notable quote from the Quora link above.

"Effectively, the long-chain hydrocarbons (like asphalt and diesel) can be broken into shorter-chain hydrocarbons (like gasoline). You end up with more gasoline. You can also adjust the regular/premium output ratios with these methods."

Perhaps more importantly, overall fuel cost is proportional to oil quality.

Not all crude oil is created equal. The Keystone XL pipeline (that everyone's formed an opinion about) is proof: the quality of "tar sand" oil delivered to my Texas backyard is poor. Light, sweet crude is the good stuff: more expensive as a raw material but easier to refine. But there are varying grades here too: light crude oil is "defined as having an API gravity higher than 31.1 °API (less than 870 kg/m3)." 

Whatever that means.

Need more detail? Too bad I didn't accept that Petroleum Engineering scholarship when I was a freshman. Perhaps there's one within the ranks of our Best and Brightest?

Send your queries to sajeev@thetruthaboutcars.com. Spare no details and ask for a speedy resolution if you're in a hurry…but be realistic, and use your make/model specific forums instead of TTAC for more timely advice.

The post Piston Slap: What makes Premium Fuel More Expensive? appeared first on The Truth About Cars.



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