drammamean
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2022
But I haven't seen too many badly rusted 1990s Toyotas or Hondas where I live.
Hard disagree here, bud. 90s Hondas and Toyotas are notorious for rusting in the rear quarter panels. Besides that, how many cars from the 90s are you actually seeing on the roads? They’re almost all junkyards by this point, many of them were destroyed by cash for clunkers. I think this is a case of survivor biase, the cars you’re seeing are just the ones that didn’t rust. But you’re definitely wrong about Toyota and Honda having nailed anti-corrosion back then. And Hondas still have shit paint to this day.
If the manual says regular is fine you are good. The engine just won’t make as much power.There are like 3 car maintenance threads I really wish they were all merged together.
Anyways I feel retarded. So I was talking about things with someone who happened to own a car with the same engine as mine and we ended up discussing the high fuel prices of late. He mentioned he is putting premium gas in his car and I mentioned that my manual said regular was fine for my car... Anyways I just reread it and realized it infact says "premium recommended plus ok" I have been putting regular in this car for about two years without any issues and my mileage is only slightly below average compared to the same year and model.
I'm questioning if it's even worth it to switch to plus at this point. My fuel level reader is also broken so to get the tank low would be a risky operation in itself.
I highly recommend buying your gas from Shell. Even their regular gas has better additives than everyone else’s, yes, even other “top tier” rated fuels. Particularly with direct injected engines that are not dual injected (it doesn’t also have fuel injectors in the intake ports) it can delay or eliminate the need for an expensive or pain in the ass intake valve cleaning.
I used to work at a shop with a dyno that was also just down the street from a Costco. Whenever cars would ping on the base map while dynonyuning it was because the customer had put Costco gas in it. We’d drain the gas and put Shell in and it would clear right up.
I only run Shell V-Power ( in performance cars that are tuned for “pump gas”).
Also I highly suggest fuel injectors/system cleaner at every or every other oil change for direct/dual injected engines. The only two worth buying are Redline (the best) and Techron (2nd best) to help keep the intake valves clean. Those two of the highest amounts of PEA, the only effective cleaning agent. Most do not have any. Follow the directions on the bottle.
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