Regular Gas in Type R
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- New ITRCA Member
- Posts: 17
- Joined: November 22nd, 2002, 2:55 pm
- Location: West Palm Beach, FL
Regular Gas in Type R
Stupid me, accidently put Regular gasoline in my car. I hit the wrong button and didnt realize it until I was finished filling up. I was looking at the money and it was really cheap and I was like OHH SHIT!
Will this hury my engine at all or is there somthing I should add to the gasoline to make it not hurt the engine? PLEASE HELP!
Will this hury my engine at all or is there somthing I should add to the gasoline to make it not hurt the engine? PLEASE HELP!
2001 Nighthawk Back Perl Integra Type-R #886
GS-R/TYPE-R: You may subsitute for an unleaded regular gasoline. The engine will compensate for the lower octane, but you may notice a slight decrease in power as a result.
SOURCE: ACURA INTEGRA 1998 Owner's Manual.
SOURCE: ACURA INTEGRA 1998 Owner's Manual.
'98 Acura Integra Type-R
'03 Honda CBR600RR
Surgeon General's Warning: It's OK to Smoke V8's
'03 Honda CBR600RR
Surgeon General's Warning: It's OK to Smoke V8's
interesting
leaded fuel isnt bad for your car, it just burn substancially hotter, which in turn can melt your catalytic converter as well as create lead deposits in your O2 sensors. If you put 105 in your car only once, it won't do any harm.
To get back to your questions about regular vs. premium, there is nothing harmful about regular, but your car runs fairly high compression with quite a bit of timing, so you really want to run higher octane. Your car can compensate for lower octane fuel for some degree, but not really all that much, so it's not something i would recomend, especially if your hard on your car. The actuall differences in the gas are some of the additive packages and detergents, but realistically, the only main difference is the octane raiting.
The thing you really don't want to do is put diesel gas in your car, that would suck!!!!
Later,
Aj
To get back to your questions about regular vs. premium, there is nothing harmful about regular, but your car runs fairly high compression with quite a bit of timing, so you really want to run higher octane. Your car can compensate for lower octane fuel for some degree, but not really all that much, so it's not something i would recomend, especially if your hard on your car. The actuall differences in the gas are some of the additive packages and detergents, but realistically, the only main difference is the octane raiting.
The thing you really don't want to do is put diesel gas in your car, that would suck!!!!
Later,
Aj
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- New ITRCA Member
- Posts: 17
- Joined: November 22nd, 2002, 2:55 pm
- Location: West Palm Beach, FL
Well, I have added octane booster and some fuel injector cleaner to this tank of gas. Somebody mentioned in another forum not to rev very high on this tank of gas. Well after adding the octane booster and fuel injector cleaner.... is it now safe?
This does not mean that im going to; I just want to kill this tank of gas to get back to my normal driving habits (fun driving, not racing)
This pissed me off so bad that I did this. I am more cafeful about my car than this... my mind was wondering when I hit the f*ckin button (REGULAR). They need to take that sh*t off the market
Thanks for any information guys!
This does not mean that im going to; I just want to kill this tank of gas to get back to my normal driving habits (fun driving, not racing)
This pissed me off so bad that I did this. I am more cafeful about my car than this... my mind was wondering when I hit the f*ckin button (REGULAR). They need to take that sh*t off the market
Thanks for any information guys!
2001 Nighthawk Back Perl Integra Type-R #886
Understand something about those octane ratings. Higher octane gas just raises the threshold at which your gasoline will tolerate heat before detonating. If you use lower octane gasoline in a high compression engine (especially on a hot day), you will hear some pinging from your engine meaning that the gas is detonating from the heat rather than a spark. BUT, your ECU compensates for lower octane by retarding your ignition timing which means that you will get a small decrease in power output. You can run forever safely on 87 octane gas in the ITR but you'll never get the same performance as consistently using 93 octane.
I'm sure your car won't be hurt by the one tank of regular; don't sweat it.
Once, just once, I filled mine with the highest octane Sunoco (usually use Shell premium - they used to call premium 'ethyl', you young guys! - and it ran horribly. I wasn't sure if it was the type of gas or just a bad batch.
Once, just once, I filled mine with the highest octane Sunoco (usually use Shell premium - they used to call premium 'ethyl', you young guys! - and it ran horribly. I wasn't sure if it was the type of gas or just a bad batch.