What Octane do you use in your ZL?

What Octane do you use in your ZL?

  • Regular, usually 87 Octane

    Votes: 10 12.8%
  • Mid-grade, usually 89 Octane

    Votes: 11 14.1%
  • Premium, usually 92 or 93 Octane

    Votes: 52 66.7%
  • Use Octane Boosters

    Votes: 2 2.6%
  • What is Octane? At today's gas prices I push my ZL around screaming "Barr-room, Barr-room"

    Votes: 3 3.8%

  • Total voters
    78
Our bikes have 10:1 compression which should be fed Premium or you may "detonate" a piston, (lean it out and burn a hole in it).
As for the "High Octane myths" higher octane burns colder which means lower engine temps and better gas mileage.

You know what my 06 GMC crew Z71 gets about 15-18 mpg, so my bike is SOO cheap to fill up, I use 92 or better.
 
I use 95 octane. Sometimes 92, the quantity of consumed fuel increases, and the difference in the price is not great, it is not always favourable.
In Russia 95 octane do from 92 by means of chemical additives.
 
When I lived in S.Carolina many of the gas stations around had 'race' gas 115+ type stuff you could put in a container (not your vehicle) I used to run this in the ZL every now and again and it did run cooler. smoother, and more miles to the gallon. Very spendy stuph though.
 
Where I live premium is 91 octane and that is what I use, and, whenever possible, I use Chevron because I once had a KZ1000 that only ran right with
Chevron supreme.
 
with my 86 900, a set of F1 mufflers,stock jets with the needles shimmed .020 I managed 41MPG 3 tanks back to back with 87 octaine fuel.

I think I will try and test the MPG this week with premium
 
Our bikes have 10:1 compression which should be fed Premium or you may "detonate" a piston, (lean it out and burn a hole in it).
As for the "High Octane myths" higher octane burns colder which means lower engine temps and better gas mileage.

You know what my 06 GMC crew Z71 gets about 15-18 mpg, so my bike is SOO cheap to fill up, I use 92 or better.

Actually the 900 has 11.0 to 1 compression. As odd as it may sound, compression really has very little to do with what octane to use. No, I'm not nuts, its the ignition timing that predicates the octane. You could have 13 to one compression, but if the combustion timing is retarded enough, you could use 87 grade with no problems. I currently use 87 on my ZL and my zzr1200 (11.2 to 1) I plan on installing the factory pro ign advancer ( plus 4 degrees) soon. When I do that, I will bump up to 89 octane. All octane is is an anti-knock additive to slow down the burning of the fuel. Thats all it does!
 
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There are two types of octane quantifiers, the RON (Research Octane Number) and the MON (Motor Octane Number). The RON is the level of the fuel's pre-detonation or "knock" resistance (compress a fuel quickly and hard enough and it will self-detonate, hence the invention of the diesel engine, which has the highest fuel efficiency rating), whereas the MON (usually the lesser octane number of the two) is the level of the amount of energy (BTU's) the fuel will provide under an adjustable engine compression ratio at a specific engine speed and load / torque. To achieve the RON number, the engines compression is steadily increased until pre-detonation of the fuel is detectable, so the higher the number, the less likely it is that any particular fuel will pre-detonate in a particular engine at a certain compression ratio. The octane number that a fuel is rated at at the fuel pump, is actually an average between the RON and the MON numbers.

A fuel's relationship to how much energy it will provide is also determined by many other factors, including the engine's compression ratio, the actual temperature of the fuel itself and it's vapourisation level (volatility), the ambient air temperature, altitude and relative humidity, but more importantly is the altitude, at sea level (or a barometric pressure of 1000mB / hPa), the pre-set engine timing is matched to the engine's intended compression ratio, to provide the most effective burn time and rate, but as you climb higher in altitude the compression ratio lower's, and the burn time and rate the fuel will burn will also increase, therefore the less power you will be able to extract from the same octane rated fuel. I know at sea level (1000 mB / hPa) my bike runs a little lean and isn't as responsive and is more prone to knock, whereas at my normal altitude of 640 metres / 2099 feet, it runs a little richer but is heaps more responsive because of the slightly slower burn time of the higher 98 octane and is therefore extracting more energy from the 98 octane than with using 87 octane, that's why I use the higher rated 98 octane fuel.

Lead was a great additive, because it didn't detract anything from the MON octane level but increased the fuels knock resistance (RON), plus providing a cushion for the valve seats and assisted in case hardening the valve seats themselves during the combustion process and helped to lubricate the piston rings and bore.
 
i use premium in my zl always !!!!!!! & on occassionally add octane booster . CHRIS

Same here Chris. Cheaper to use premium than to rebuild an engine. Aren't we using 11:1 compression? I'm old school. That seems to scream for premium.

I use that anti water stuff too. Gas stations in MI can use up to 10% ethanol without telling anyone. It has a lot of water in it. I've seen it stall out customers cars at work before and collect in my fuel bowls when I clean my bike.
 
Always use premium gas in the ZL900 and the sled. 104 octane in the race car.
 
Now that I've found ethanol free 91, that's what I run. There is a big difference how it runs especially if it sits for a fee weeks.

I have an adjustable timing advance plate and agree on the practice of increasing octane when timing is advanced.

I was taught to tune a modified engine by using high octane gas, warming it up, run it up a steep hill wide open in second gear from a low rpm, keep advancing the timing till you hear it ping then back the timing off a bit and lock it down. If it is hard cranking, back it down some more. That method works quite well for me, I hate leaving timing on the table.
 
:hello: The EL 250 Eliminator requires 91 octane. The stock pistons are 12.5 to 1 compresson rating. I've seen aftermarket ones 14 to 1.
 
I have a +4 advancer and always use 93 spring thru fall. non ethenol fuel winter time have tried the off road 115. It smells so good but the cost is 4x.
 
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