I thought my fellow North Carolina owners might like to know this.I got curious about this as the price of gas climbs higher, and as I thought of a story that a friend of mine told me from when he was in college.He worked at a student beer bar, the kind of place where people get cheap pitchers of beer. He said that the bar was lined with taps which supposedly went to different kinds of beer, but that they all fed into a keg of Milwaukee's Best, which could be charitably described as not the best beer ever made. That image stuck with me, and sometimes as I get ready to pump premium gas into my car, I have a picture in my mind of all three grades of gas coming from the same tank of regular.
I have the Mountune MP 215 tune, which requires premium gas, but I was using it even when I was stock. I figured you may as well get all the power that the car has available, but if I'm paying at least $0.60 a gallon more for premium, I damn sure want to be getting it.
I did some digging, and found that there are two related divisions of the NC Department of Agriculture responsible for testing gas pumps. One tests for quantity, pumping gas into pre-measured 5-gallon containers. The other division is in charge of octane and other quality measures. They do some testing at the pump, and take some back to the lab for some other testing.I talked to the guy in charge of this division, and he was very sharp, he started telling me all these things about how octane is determined. He clearly knew what he was talking about. He said they also test for ethanol level.
So, at least here in NC, it appears that we have a decent shot at getting what we're paying for when we get gas as far as correct quantity and octane go.
I have the Mountune MP 215 tune, which requires premium gas, but I was using it even when I was stock. I figured you may as well get all the power that the car has available, but if I'm paying at least $0.60 a gallon more for premium, I damn sure want to be getting it.
I did some digging, and found that there are two related divisions of the NC Department of Agriculture responsible for testing gas pumps. One tests for quantity, pumping gas into pre-measured 5-gallon containers. The other division is in charge of octane and other quality measures. They do some testing at the pump, and take some back to the lab for some other testing.I talked to the guy in charge of this division, and he was very sharp, he started telling me all these things about how octane is determined. He clearly knew what he was talking about. He said they also test for ethanol level.
So, at least here in NC, it appears that we have a decent shot at getting what we're paying for when we get gas as far as correct quantity and octane go.
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