also as an aside ....
though by the military sometimes for practical purposes called 150 octane - there may be no such thing as 150 octane number
afaik
120/150 fuel means 120 and 150 PN (Performance Numbers) and the associated 'supercharge ratings'
not the Research Octane Number RON and Motor Octane Number MON ratings which inherently range between 0 and 100
btw the same CFC fixed design variable compression test motor is used today as c. 90 years ago
iso-octane (the 100 ON reference fuel) used and the knock-limiting compression ratio established (presumably at NA imep)
120 means the fuel tests (at 'lean' ie worst mixture detonationwise) at 120 PN ie 20% higher imep - implying 20% more power
150 PN means the fuel tests (at 'rich' ie best power mixture) at 50% - implying 50% more power
the higher imeps ie boost being obtained from air tanks
presumably induction air temperature standardised as in RON and MON tests ie cooling effect of rich mixture standardised
the blurb is here https://www.astm.org/Standards/D909.htm (supercharge method)
and D2699 (research octane number) and D2700 (engine octane number aka motor octane number) used for car gasoline
supercharge rating was developed for rating aviation fuels more knock-resistant than 100 Octane No ON
D909 uses reference fuels in a range from 85 octane to isoctane + 6ml/usgal TEL
postwar civil and military Avgas standards were/are 80/87PN 100/130PN 108/135PN 115/145PN
'rich' PN is much higher than 'lean' PN in typical Avgas due to unnaturally high content of alkylate, benzene, toluene, or xylene
'rich' mixture being AFRs of 0.55 or 0.6
typical Avgas ie 100/130 was a British contrivance that by the accident of WW2 became the global standard
somewhat to the distaste of eg the US whose 100/130 may be around 108/130 though sold as 100/130 PN spec
the Wright engines as in WW2 B-29 and postwar Turbocompound-powered airliners always needed 115/145
but Pratt & Whitney refused it because of the high TEL - 108/135 came from 115/145 with 100/130's TEL content
when the big engines retired the 100/130 (called 100L) was replaced by 100LL - this had/has slightly less lead (still a lot)