Re: What octane gas to use
I agree with Silvertip and Chewey here with two clarifications . . .
#1 If you are running in high ambient temperatures and under high load factors you can potentially get slightly better performance using higher octane fuel in electronic engines with knock sensors . . . Think about it this way, if the engine is retarding timing to protect from knock with lower octane fuel then the inverse is true: more spark advance with higher octane . . .
# 2 is that pre-ignition (premature) is detonation before the spark plug fires. But more common detonation (knock) occurs when the spark starts the ignition when it is supposed to, but the burn is actually a bang. Bang is bad. Same phenomenon, just at a different time . . . The latter can be controlled with spark timing. Pre-ignition (rare) cannot be controlled without changing the fuel, or the compression ratio, or the load, or ambient etc. etc. Simply put, if the bang happens before the spark plug fires, how does changing the spark timing do anything?