Ok, here's some simple math in answer to the question,
how much money will I save by using 89 octane instead of 93 octane? Let's assume that you're driving 20,000 miles yearly, that the price differential between 93 and 89 is 10 cents, and that you're getting 20 miles per gallon. Let's also assume that your gas mileage stays the same with the lower octane fuel, which may or may not be the case. If it decreases, as many have stated, the savings at the pump would be correspondingly lower.
20,000 divided by 20 is 1000 gallons used yearly. At 10 cents per gallon less, you are saving -- are you ready for this -- a whopping
$100 per year! Even if your total miles or gas mileage are higher or lower, we're talking chump change, basically. Just to make the point
ad absurdum, even if you drove 40,000 miles and only got 10 miles to the gallon, you'd be saving $400.
So if only as an insurance policy against possible engine damage or carbon build-up, isn't the extra $100 worth it?
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