Fuel Octane/AKI/RON... so what is "Premium" according to BMW?
Hey all.
Been lurking around the boards all morning looking at recommended octane ratings, etc. for a 1992 525i with the M50B25 (non-VANOS). I know that:
a) I have no knock sensors and, hence, the engine will not "adapt" to the wrong gasoline grade and
b) my dashboard and fuel filler say "Premium Unleaded Only"
The question, though, is with all the different fuel ratings, what does BMW mean by "Premium?" I found the following passage on WikiPedia which would seem to suggest that, in the US, "Premium" would be 89/90 octane (AKI) (in other words, our mid-grade)... since this is referenced as "European Premium":
<<<Different countries have some variation in what RON (Research Octane Number) is standard for gasoline, or petrol. In the UK, ordinary regular unleaded petrol is 91 RON (not commonly available), premium unleaded petrol is always 95 RON, and super unleaded is usually 97-98 RON. In the US, octane ratings in fuels can vary between 86-87 AKI (91-92 RON) for regular, through 89-90 (94-95) for mid-grade (European Premium), up to 90-94 (RON 95-99) for premium unleaded or E10 (Super in Europe)>>>
This would make "Premium" 89/90 AKI (or "octane" for us Americans) or 94/95 RON (for our folks in the UK, Oz and elsewhere). Many of the previous posts regarding "recommended octane" or "fuel grade" are asked in one country and answered in the terms of another... making this answer ellusive. I know that using too high an octane on a stock motor can be detrimental. I'm actually not all that concerned with spending the extra $.10 a gallon to fill up, but am rather wanting to use the "correct" fuel grade to avoid carbon buildup and other issues over the life of my car. This is my daily driver and is only driven in a "spirited" manner on the roads--not raced.
Anyone have the definitive answer on this? My car did not come with an owner's manual so I have no "official" reference from which to pull. However, I did find what appears to be a 1992 e34 owner's manual online (http://luuk.xs4all.nl/bmwboeken/bmwe34manual/) that references "Premium" fuel as "95 RM" (see page 4 of above)... which makes me think that BMW may actually mean 89/90 AKI (Octane), or mid-grade fuel for the US market, but just didn't translate that requirement when they exported their vehicles.
FYI, my Bimmer (henceforth known as Ludwig, or "Vic") is:
1992 (build date 3/92)
bone-stock 525i
M50B25 engine
5-speed manual tranny
Islandgrun Metallic ('cause we all know the color makes a difference in how fast you can go!) ;-)
That doesn't quite seem to speak to the original question...
Quote:
Originally Posted by ThoreauHD
At or above 91 octane. And the reasoning is that your engine will stutter and no workie when you have it running at native spec's, like say with a jim conforti or EATS chip, at a lower octane.
I realize that I'd need 91+ "octane" (US spec AKI) IF I was using an EAT chip or similar, but not all e34 owners want to chip their engines (I know I don't). The question really revolves around the true meaning of "Premium Unleaded Fuel" as defined by BMW, and not the "octane" requirements for those owners who chose to chip their cars (who should, of course, follow the chip programmer's recommendations).
Hasn't anyone else thought of this?