NTS wrote:beelsebob wrote:in fact, even most road going turbos specifically ask for fuel in the 90-94ish range, 98-99 is complete overkill.
Please include US or EU in any "octane" number quoted

most BMW and Audi engines for example specify 95 to 102 as the operating-range in EU numbers, which I think is 90 to 95 in US numbers? So you might be taking about the same range, just different method of measurement.
Ah indeed I am quoting US numbers, I had not realized that they were different, and indeed I'm quoting from my car's manual which has a US 1.8T engine, so indeed we're talking about 95-102 in UK numbers.
Note though, the general point still applies, you will
not get better fuel efficiency from a higher octane rating, unless your engine is operating at reasonably high compression ratios (read, has a turbo charger). Again, higher octane fuel has
less energy density than lower octane fuel, it can just be burned more efficiently, because it resists auto-ignition (and hence knocking) when compressed highly (again, because it's less volatile).