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vjm530
07-11-2008, 07:59 PM
Hello Everyone,

I have a '97 Land Rover Range Rover 4.0 v8 that requires that I 'always' use Premium gas. I am installing a double Electrolizer Generator HHO setup with a MAF Sensor Enhansor to get the maximum benefit. It has been suggested that I should be able to use Regular fuel once the system is installed properly. Does anyone have any comments, support or suggestions about the switch to Regular? Thanks for all and any 'positive' feedback.:confused:

Stratous
07-11-2008, 08:59 PM
I may be mistaken, but the difference between regular and premium gas is basically the compression ratio that it takes to ignite the fuel. The higher the compression ratio of the engine, the higher the octane rating of the fuel needed. The addition of hydrogen which I believe is considered to have an octane rating of 130 to 140, would probably offset the need for higher octane fuel.

I took this off wiki:
Hydrogen represents a paradox. As a fuel outright, it has low knock resistance[2][3], due to its low ignition energy (primarily due to its low dissociation energy) and extremely high flame speed. However, as a minor blending component (i.e., a bi-fuel vehicle), hydrogen raises overall knock resistance. Flame speed is limited by the rest of the component species; hydrogen may reduce knock by contributing its high thermal conductivity

vjm530
07-11-2008, 10:03 PM
I may be mistaken, but the difference between regular and premium gas is basically the compression ratio that it takes to ignite the fuel. The higher the compression ratio of the engine, the higher the octane rating of the fuel needed. The addition of hydrogen which I believe is considered to have an octane rating of 130 to 140, would probably offset the need for higher octane fuel.

I took this off wiki:
Hydrogen represents a paradox. As a fuel outright, it has low knock resistance[2][3], due to its low ignition energy (primarily due to its low dissociation energy) and extremely high flame speed. However, as a minor blending component (i.e., a bi-fuel vehicle), hydrogen raises overall knock resistance. Flame speed is limited by the rest of the component species; hydrogen may reduce knock by contributing its high thermal conductivity

Thanks for your feedback. Though it sounds a bit technical for me to understand (wiki) it sounds very encouraging.:)

Stratous
07-11-2008, 10:07 PM
wikipedia=wiki

Omega
07-12-2008, 01:22 AM
I read somewhere that HHO eliminates knocking (whether detonation or pre-ignition, I don't know) and that exhaust temperatures are reduced. Pre-ignition can be caused by carbon buildup and HHO is known to eliminate carbon buildup.

Since HHO seems to act like a combustion enhancer, it may very well eliminate the need for higher octane fuel.

It all seems good, to me.

admin
07-12-2008, 06:47 AM
The core differences between Regular (87 Octane) and Premium (91+ Octane) is not only the Octane, but mostly anti-knock and detergents that make a HUGE difference. If your car says "Use Premium Gasoline Only" Like both of mine do, do NOT put anything else in, or the Engine computer will see the octane level and put your car into what is called "Limp mode" which is to get you to the next service station so you can put the right gas into the car. The MPG will suffer enormously in Limp mode.

I ran a tank of Regular and clocked the KM/tank on a full tank, and got WAY more power, and also an extra 80-100KM per tank with premium. (More on highway)

vjm530
07-12-2008, 10:58 AM
The core differences between Regular (87 Octane) and Premium (91+ Octane) is not only the Octane, but mostly anti-knock and detergents that make a HUGE difference. If your car says "Use Premium Gasoline Only" Like both of mine do, do NOT put anything else in, or the Engine computer will see the octane level and put your car into what is called "Limp mode" which is to get you to the next service station so you can put the right gas into the car. The MPG will suffer enormously in Limp mode.

I ran a tank of Regular and clocked the KM/tank on a full tank, and got WAY more power, and also an extra 80-100KM per tank with premium. (More on highway)

What about the fact that I would be running a HHO system as I have described and the comments of the other posters above? :confused:

Tekneek
08-19-2008, 01:56 AM
The computer would see it with the knock sensor that many cars are equipped with. I don't know from experience yet because my premium requiring car hasn't had the HHO hooked up yet. I was hoping that I could pass up the premium myself when I install everything.

vjm530
08-19-2008, 10:06 AM
The computer would see it with the knock sensor that many cars are equipped with. I don't know from experience yet because my premium requiring car hasn't had the HHO hooked up yet. I was hoping that I could pass up the premium myself when I install everything.

I'm running the middle range (89) octane with no problems.:D

gamerpipe
08-21-2008, 02:35 PM
hi vjm530, where do u live? what altitude above sea level?
its a fact than as altitude above sea level of the city where a car is driven increases, the need of higher octane gasoline decreases. so depending on that, you can make a mix of both types of gasoline to obtain an average of octane level; besides, what is the compresion ratio of your engine?.
with that information i could help u to calculate if is possible to do the mix and which proportions.

vjm530
08-21-2008, 03:00 PM
hi vjm530, where do u live? what altitude above sea level?
its a fact than as altitude above sea level of the city where a car is driven increases, the need of higher octane gasoline decreases. so depending on that, you can make a mix of both types of gasoline to obtain an average of octane level; besides, what is the compresion ratio of your engine?.
with that information i could help u to calculate if is possible to do the mix and which proportions.

I live 2 blocks from Monterey Bay so I'm at Sea level. I don't know what the 'compression ratio' is of my beast in that it's a '97 Land Rover Range Rover 4.0 v8 w/152k miles. As of yesterday my city MPG has increased to 20+. Prior it was 11-12.:confused:

vjm530
08-21-2008, 03:42 PM
I live 2 blocks from Monterey Bay so I'm at Sea level. I don't know what the 'compression ratio' is of my beast in that it's a '97 Land Rover Range Rover 4.0 v8 w/152k miles. As of yesterday my city MPG has increased to 20+. Prior it was 11-12.:confused:

My compression ratio is 9.34:1

Cadillac
08-22-2008, 01:20 AM
After they removal of lead in gasoline the rule of thumb became to move the decimal over one place to the right and that was the octane the car needed. Say a 9.34:1 would need 93 octane.

This is a little bit old school with the advances in engineering. A lot of car manufactures have adopted the use of aluminum heads. This allows them to run higher compression ratios, more advanced timing curves to achieve higher MPG and performance from cars. Not to mention it is dirt cheap and very light weight. The aluminum heads shed off heat at such a faster rate that the fear of detonation is greatly reduced. Even cars that still use iron heads have became cutting edge in there design to handle the heat.

Most OBD-II cars can sense what type of octane the gas is in the tank. With the higher octanes the timing will advance. With the lower octane it will retard. Any new school car can run any octane. Before the EPA got rid of MBTE in gas for ethanol you could see quite a differance between 87 and 93 octane in terms of MPG.

So with hydrogen you would think that the lower octane would play to your advantage because of the more retarded timing curves. Each car is different in terms of how sensatvie they are so I would suggest some experimentation to see if you see and feel what you want to out of the reduced octane.

scirockett
10-06-2008, 01:56 PM
Look, I'm all for the HHO technology, but the biggest problem I see with everyone's setup is the complete lack of metering the HHO gas. Although you may have enough HHO to augement the lean mixture at a cruising speed, engine's don't knock at cruising speeds. they knock under load.. Now for those who have modified their map/maf for a leaner burn, you have more chance of detonation. throw less octane into the mix, and the problem is exaggerated. Those who run just an o2 mod, you'll have 'normal' fueling conditions under load which would be safer.

But my point.. still have a problem with 2lpm of HHO mixing with anywhere from 500lpm to 5000lpm of a/f through all different size motors, running lean, with zero metering. with that being said, how can anyone expect HHO to make up for reduced octane if it's percentage varies throughout the RPM band?

JonDoh
10-09-2008, 06:25 AM
I read somewhere that HHO eliminates knocking (whether detonation or pre-ignition, I don't know) and that exhaust temperatures are reduced. Pre-ignition can be caused by carbon buildup and HHO is known to eliminate carbon buildup.

Since HHO seems to act like a combustion enhancer, it may very well eliminate the need for higher octane fuel.

It all seems good, to me.

In my friend's Lexus LS400, he had some knocking but once we turn on the gen it quit knocking. Lexus requires premium since the gen has been installed, he uses regular & has no problems. ( i installed the unit) Works great.