Ask HN: Does anyone else notice that gas runs out faster than usual
- gas smells less like gas
- not getting as much mileage as usual
I filled up my car and I have a habit of resetting my mileage tracker (next to odometer) to see how many miles I get out of a full tank.
I've noticed that I get much less gas than usual for the same number of bars.
What can I do to make this more concrete? Has anyone else noticed this?
19 comments
[ 1.6 ms ] story [ 35.3 ms ] thread>I've noticed that I get much less gas than usual for the same number of bars.
I'm having a hard time parsing what this means.
>- gas smells less like gas
Is it possible for a person to smell the difference between octanes? The higher octane fuels have lower volatiles, so that might affect the smell.
Now is right about the time that refineries and gas stations switch from winter blend to summer blend, so maybe there's something to that.
https://carbuzz.com/feds-fight-gas-prices-easing-ethanol-res...
Or not.
There is quite a bit more expansion & contraction of hydrocarbons with temperature than many peoople expect.
You shouldn’t be noticing more than a 7.5% drop between E0 and E15 gas, which would be a pretty hard swing in gas composition. What % do your figures show?
Of course tune up.
Have you changed gas stations / brands recently?
Ethanol has an Octane rating of 114%, meaning that you can run your engine with less fuel in the fuel/gas mixture, if your engine, pipes, fuel pump and rubber hoses are made for that.
Ethanol is pretty awesome in terms of HP output, but you have to reprogram the maps in the ECU to correctly use it. The timings of "how fast" Ethanol explodes inside your engine cylinders is also faster, meaning if you don't remap your ECU there's chances of backfire because the valves don't close fast enough. That means if you don't have a V-Tec or similarly digitally controlled valve steering you have to also modify your camshaft.
Source: Rebuild 3 cars and their engines to be fueled with Ethanol because I live near a race track with cheap access to Ethanol.
Edit: some gas stations in the past were using shitty additives to boost the ethanol mixture with toluols and methyl ethylene variants, so could also be that. They're really bad for your engine block. Like, reeeeally bad because their mixture is very unpredictable and varies too much for a proper ethanol ECU map.
They rigged the pumps to rack up more charges for the first 5 gallons, and then slow the charges for the next 5 gallons. That way it always read 10 gallons at those intervals, but overcharged you if you got less. Someone pumping 4 gallons (or 14) was charged as if they had pumped 6 (or 16).
They got caught when someone noticed that the gauge ran faster, then slower as you filled up.
You could also install something like https://lubelogger.com/ (naming decision aside), if you happen to do any self-hosting. It is a lightweight vehicle tracker. It has a fuel tracking screen. I personally only use it to track maintenance, but have been thinking about starting to track fuel consumption given the current disruption.
https://bartovation.com/product/moisture-leak-detection/qual...
https://www.acustrip.com/cgi-bin/proddesc.cgi?s=40134
if you get into analyzing fuel samples beware that surprisingly small amounts of vapour can make a likewise large bang. just a drop or two of gasoline vapourized and ignited in a mortar tube, will make you change your pants.
https://thisvsthat.io/gasoline-vs-iso-octane
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2,2,4-Trimethylpentane
https://www.waldeneffect.org/blog/How_to_measure_the_ethanol...
And I have an old ford truck that absolutely wreaks of gas/exhaust or something rich when it’s keyed on now. Getting 9-12mpg in that thing wouldn’t get me to bat an eye but come on; in the new car?
Wasn’t doing this until I’d just filled it up last week. The last tank I went through was probably from February? I don’t drive it that much. You could say it has a pretty simple exhaust system that wouldn’t do as good of a job at masking theoretical adulterants. That didn’t even cross my mind, I just noticed this horrible noxious smell when I re parked it last night.
Los Angeles at the moment.
Didn’t California just lose a couple refineries who said no thanks and took a billion dollar loss rather than confirm to new environmental regulations?