Slip_Angle
Registered Member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2018
- Messages
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- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
My point exactly. The S4 owner engine requires 91 or better fuel. His engine gained more power with 94 octane as expected. Modern engines usually reduce timing as the rpms increase past a point or at WOT especially force inducted engines, so it may not be a fuel quality issue; but just how the engine runs normally. However, higher octane reduces the need for reduced engine retard as the rpm increases; hence again why 94 octane created more power.
91 or better, means the engine runs better as the octane increases as was the case for the S4 owner dyno results.
Well, not really. He had a 92 octane outperform a 94 octane fuel. I understand how timing works and when you have a tuned ECU, you can increase timing and boost to suite higher octanes. That is well understood.
What I'm saying is that in a factory stock ECU timing and boost will be set to capped levels. So let's say the G70 makes 365hp and 400ft/lbs maximum at 12psi and 15 degrees of timing -- provided there is no knock. If you put in 87 octane and there is no knock, you will reach target power figures. If you put in 91 octane, you will reach 12psi and 15 degrees BUT since the higher octane fuel burns slower, you won't reach the 365hp and 400ft/lbs. If the engine knocks with lower octane, then yes all bets are off and you need a higher octane fuel.
I did some testing on my G70 over the span of several months and with 3 different fuels and octane levels. My car ran it's best 0-60 times using 87 octane. 91 and 93 were consistently slower. Now there are holes in my experiment, I will admit. Different brands, days etc... but overall the results were consistent.
Here is an article explaining what I mean...
Octane vs. Horsepower - Separating fact from myth in the debate over which fuel makes more power - NASA Speed News Magazine

