Gasoline always seems to prompt debate and comments, so here's mine
Gasoline degrades gradually as soon as it leaves the refinery. Costco pumps a lot of gas so there gas is comparatively "fresh". It is also cheaper. When traveling I buy gas at high-volumne truck stops. Gas is cheaper and fresher.
I'm on my 4th Genesis - 3 V8s and now a V6. Always found better gas mileage on highway travel using 87 octane. I have found this to be true with other high-compression autos (Jaguar, BMW,
Cadillac CTS-V); but I think this is mostly true with highway, light throttle settings. At light throttle no detonation is detected. In town with heavier throttle acceleration detonation is more likely, which in turn causes ignition advance to retard, which reduces gas mileage. So, premium seems to make more sense to me with in-town driving.
I add a couple of bottle of Techron (bought at Costco, of course) with every oil change. Currently, Hyundai is recommending fuel injection cleaner periodically; and the house brand (expensive) is Techron with a private Hyundai label. Direct fuel injectors seem to require cleaner. My guess is that one can defer this maintenance, but eventually injectors will have to be cleaned.
Hyundai V8s seem to loosen up/fully break in after 10K miles. Gas mileage improves and so does power. Ring seating seems to set and then loosen, only to set again. Noticed that oil consumption rose a bit with short in-town travel, but settled down after a few hundred continous highway miles.
Piston ring blow-by seems to be a problem with direct injected V8s when the rings are not fully seated. Crankcase ventilation could be better as a fair amount of blowby oil mist is sent to the intake manifold. With manifold injectors this oil mist is mixed/diluted with gasoline before intro into the combustion chamber. With direct injection there is a tendency for oil mist to coat the back side of intake valves, which can become problematic.