What type of gas do you use?

  • Sponsors (?)


Keep in mind guys that anyone with an aftermarket tune will see zero gain by jumping up an octane. If you are tuned for 91, then the timing curves developed by the tuner are locked in and the car won't respond to the higher octane, just like you can't run lower without worrying about detonation. Stock calibration cars do enjoy that variable tune. However, I ran all 3 grades of gas on my stock tune and noted very minimal changes in mileage that could be attributed to driving style, and no real increase in performance that I could notice. I will say that knowing it was running at peak efficiency was nice, and made it worth the extra $.20 or so a gallon to get premium.
 
Seat of the pants

A 10hp gain on a 400hp motor is a very small gain...not easy to "feel"....The best way to determine if hp increases, decreases or stays the same is to dyno the motor....Im sure you could do a search and find someone who has done a dyno with different octane levels in the 5.0 mustangs.

Most tuners offer 3 tunes to take into account different octane fuels and performance and fuel economy desires of the consumers...

Everyone knows that flowmaster, R and many other stickers make a mustang faster...thanks Mr. obvious.
 
Say i get the 3 custom tunes from american muscle, can I get a tune for regular gas and another for premium?

Yes, you can get street or race inspired tunes for any octane. Never a bad thing if you have limited availabilty. I know when I was in Cali, they had only 91 as premium, so I got a tune for that. Now that I am back east, we have 93 out the ears, so I got tuned for that. I still have the 91 tune, but I don't use it at all. If you have readily available premium, I'd just order the single tune for that octane, save the money, and run the best stuff you can get. Odds are the efficiency and power increases you'd see with a 93 tune vs an 87 tune would probably offset the slightly cheaper 87. Even at $0.10-$0.20 more per gallon, that's really only $2-3 more per fillup, and if you think about how many things you blow 2-3 bucks on per week. On top of that, you're saving the cost of the other two tunes, which can go toward a nice CAI, it's the cherry on the tuning cake.
 
Yeah Im definatly going back to regular, car still hesitates on acceleration
and takes longer to start, no 10HP happening from running premium.:notnice:
If the car could could adjust to that wide of a parameter, no one
would need a tuner, right.
 
octane

Yeah Im definatly going back to regular, car still hesitates on acceleration
and takes longer to start, no 10HP happening from running premium.:notnice:
If the car could could adjust to that wide of a parameter, no one
would need a tuner, right.

Your car is rated for 87 octane. 93 will do nothing for you without a tune. Only the 5.0 mustangs will see HP gains and losses from octane levels.

You should read the post b4 adding comments...The OP has a 2012 GT.
 
No.

Here is the Ford 5.0 owners manual statement on octane.

Octane recommendations (5.0L V8 engine)
Your vehicle will run normally on 87 octane regular fuel without
damaging the engine, but premium fuel with an octane rating of 91
(R+M)/2 or higher is recommended for best overall performance.