Petrol tank alarm emergency action cautionary warning device

Discussion in 'Bonneville' started by Muddles, Mar 1, 2017.

  1. This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Learn More.
  1. Dougie D

    Dougie D Crème de la Crème

    Jan 30, 2016
    10,662
    1,000
    Blairgowrie Perthshire
    Re petrol stations I've always thought it was the same stuff wherever you bought it, and i just assumed the big supermarkets are able to sell it cheaper because (A) they are bigger (are BP & shell stations not franchises:confused:) and (B) they sell petrol as a sort of loss leader just to get us to shop at their stores. i do believe it is different with oil though
     
    • Like Like x 1
  2. MrOrange

    MrOrange Guest

    Oils are definitely not the same, don't touch supermarket stuff.

    But petrol, nae difference in my experience. I ran a diesel Rover 600 from nearly new to 150,000 in less than four years, never had to touch that car once, same clutch, brakes, exhaust everything !!! Just ran up the motorway and back - on supermarket diesel !!! (Wife wrote the car off, and an Audi, 150k on the clock, not a mark on the body, interior or alloys, looked like a showroom car, until it tried to get in the passenger seat of the Audi !!!:D)

    High mileage says way more about servicing and how it is driven, than about the fuel used.

    Bentley - piece of German tat !!!!:D:D:D:D;),coincidence - yes - no way did using any type of fuel make it go pop.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  3. Mr Toad

    Mr Toad Senior Member

    Oct 14, 2016
    262
    113
    Nottinghamshire
    My last bike was a BMW R1100RS, it covered a little over 185,000 miles in five years and never had anything other than supermarket fuel in it.

    My only costs were the usual service consumables, tyres and a new clutch at 130,000 miles.

    The whole premium v supermarket fuel thing has been done to death and as stated it all comes from the same refineries. What is different are the additives that are put into it by various companies which are added when the fuel is put into the tanker prior to delivery.

    I did try try my Merc SL AMG on premium grade fuel because people swear they get better mpg. I put several tankfuls through it covering most driving situations and it saw absolutely no improvement in mpg at all. Yes it's true that on some tankfuls I got a 10% increase in mpg but the same is true of supermarket fuel too and I put it down to driving conditions, the weather and me being a bit more careful.

    I once followed a tanker from Tesco, it was leaving just in front of me. I was behind it in traffic right up to the point it pulled into the BP station about a mile from Tesco.
     
    • Like Like x 3
  4. MrOrange

    MrOrange Guest

    "Grangemouth (Oil Refinery) represents INEOS’ largest manufacturing site by volume of products. It is also home to Petroineos, Scotland’s only crude oil refinery and produces the bulk of fuels used in Scotland."

    Yes, might add some additives as stated above by @Mr Toad, but it all comes from the same place.:cool:
     
  5. H.O.

    H.O. Noble Member

    Nov 28, 2015
    1,045
    300
    ARDROSSAN, AYRSHIRE
    [QUOTE="Mr Toad, post: 100665, member: 5303"

    I once followed a tanker from Tesco, it was leaving just in front of me. I was behind it in traffic right up to the point it pulled into the BP station about a mile from Tesco.[/QUOTE]

    Perhaps he wouldn't use that Tesco stuff in his own tank then, went to the nearest BP station to fill his lorry tank up!:)
     
    • Like Like x 3
  6. steve lovatt

    steve lovatt Something else

    May 12, 2014
    9,218
    1,000
    North Yorkshire
    Years ago my mate worked for Esso (as in European marketing manager or something, not in a filling station). He said that most UK bound petrol was bought at one of the five refineries in Rotterdam, so it's essentially all the same stuff with a different logo on the tanker.
     
  7. OnlySon

    OnlySon Well-Known Member

    Aug 23, 2016
    414
    63
    Scotland. UK
    Fuel isn't just fuel and some vehicles warrant/require top grade fuel and some don't.

    I had a tuned R34 GTR and a trip to the supermarket petrol station would have been not only risky but an emergency last resort £5 worth. Even that would have meant crawling/driving off boost until I got to Shell for V Power. Putting high octane in your Honda Jazz would be pointless. Even BP Ultimate was pretty poopy and the car didn't perform. The Scrambler gets anything.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  8. steve lovatt

    steve lovatt Something else

    May 12, 2014
    9,218
    1,000
    North Yorkshire
    Back to the original thread - the reserve light on my SE Bonnie comes on at around 130 miles with normal riding.
    With my old 790cc carbed T100 I used to switch to the reserve at around 135 miles but did manage 201 miles in total on reserve whilst desperately trying to find a petrol station in Germany!
     
    • Like Like x 1
  9. Muddles

    Muddles New Member

    Feb 28, 2017
    8
    3
    London/Essex
    I've had no problems with supermarket fuel and generally find the best petrol station is the nearest station when i need one. I tried all the 97/ hi octane power performance superduper fuel in the ol cbr for a while but actually found it worse. I loosly understand that stuff is based on compression or combustion ratios and so i assume that standard 95 is best for the bonny, pb or asda addatives aside.
     
  10. Muddles

    Muddles New Member

    Feb 28, 2017
    8
    3
    London/Essex
    This and other posts from you chaps with higher milage really makes me question things. I dont ride like a complete moron. My main ride is a quick burn down an A road, a bit of town and filtering and then back again about 30miles a day. I'm still getting used to this bike and am used to the cbr giving me at least 130 before the reserve started to drop, i'd figured the bonny although a bigger engine, revving less would burn less.
    I made sure i topped it up good n propper this time, ill see where it gets me.

    Thank you for all the replies so far, what a lovely bunch of bikers you are.
     
    • Like Like x 2
  11. MrOrange

    MrOrange Guest

    Although higher octane can cost substantially more per gallon, it does not necessarily mean it is better for your car. Higher octane fuel is processed through additional steps that further refine the blend and cause it to burn more slowly than lower octanes. These additional processes are what contribute to the higher pricing, but that does not mean the higher octane will offer any advantage over other blends in many engines. Higher octane does not offer any better fuel mileage, increase engine horsepower, or make the engine start quicker. Higher octane only reduces the likelihood of engine knock or ping.

    @OnlySon , your R34 had knock sensors, unlike most cars, so therefore it could make use of the higher octane fuels, but all of our bikes and cars generally don't. So don't waste your hard earned on it unless you are running one of these or similar - Mitsi EVO's , etc

     
    • Like Like x 1
  12. MickEng

    MickEng Noble Member

    Sep 29, 2016
    1,805
    450
    West Yorkshire
    How do you know he wasnt just popping in for a Yorkie ?
    Did you watch him unload his fuel ?
    You lot keep filling up with your supermarket shite to save threepence, leave the good stuff for me and my motors.
    Laughing as I'm typing, all in good fun!
     
    • Like Like x 2
  13. H.O.

    H.O. Noble Member

    Nov 28, 2015
    1,045
    300
    ARDROSSAN, AYRSHIRE
    According to Haynes: Bonnie tank capacity is 16.6l, minus 3.5l reserve = 13.1l usable before reserve.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  14. BBBMLJ

    BBBMLJ Well-Known Member

    Mar 14, 2017
    28
    63
    Kent
    My engineering company use to service the pumps, valves etc at the large fuel storage facilities (tank farms).
    One day we asked the question regarding Supermarket vs Service Station fuel quality. We were told that except for additives the supermarket stuff is the same. However, the service station brands buy from the top and middle of the storage tanks and when the levels are low in the tanks that is where the supermarket fuel comes from.
    There are no filters as the fuel is pumped from the storage tanks to the fuel tankers so any fine sediment is in the lower section of the storage tank. Coarser sediment settles at the very bottom which is never completely drained except for when we did annual servicing. You would be amazed at the crap that we removed from those tanks - sludge!!
     
    • Like Like x 6
  15. John Will

    John Will Member

    Dec 5, 2016
    43
    18
    Bury St Edmunds.
    Tanker drivers who worked out of the now defunct Canvey Island site warned me against supermarket fuel 20 years ago. When in a rush no additives.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  16. MickEng

    MickEng Noble Member

    Sep 29, 2016
    1,805
    450
    West Yorkshire
    Well, well, at last some genuine knowledge regarding the reason why Supermarket fuel is unbranded and could very easily F***k up your engine.
    As per my previous posts regarding this, use what you want in your engines, leave the good stuff for me!
     
    • Like Like x 1
  17. MickEng

    MickEng Noble Member

    Sep 29, 2016
    1,805
    450
    West Yorkshire
    Good info. John, thanks for that, never doubted that there was a difference, just couldn't prove it.
     
  18. Dougie D

    Dougie D Crème de la Crème

    Jan 30, 2016
    10,662
    1,000
    Blairgowrie Perthshire
    interesting, looks like I'll just use the supermarkets in an emergency,saying that we only have a Tesco fuel station and an independent "Jet" station and they are always the same price, so i always go to the independent if I'm filling up locally
     
  19. Mr Toad

    Mr Toad Senior Member

    Oct 14, 2016
    262
    113
    Nottinghamshire
    Really!

    With the amount of fuel the supermarkets sell/get through each week do you seriously think they have to wait until the tanks at the refinery are low before they are 'allowed' to buy the dregs?

    If supermarket fuel really did f**k up engines the roads would be littered with dead cars.

    Also, with regard to fuel quality, you need to look at ECU mapping. Companies are making a fortune remapping standard ECUs. Manufacturers mapping is so generic because it has to be able to function in countries where fuel quality is unregulated and really poor. This and a wide range of temperature and air quality/altitude etc..

    Most modern cars will run on fuel that barely qualifies as petrol.

    Then there's branding. Well that's the power of advertising over common sense, it all comes from the same refineries out of the same tanks with each 'brand' adding their own mix of additives. The extra you pay at the pumps goes to pay for the TV advertising and to keep the oil company CEO in the billionaire club.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  20. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
    6,029
    1,000
    uk
    All fuel must meet a minimum standard . There is no one out there selling fuel that is maxium best cant be improved " This fuel is FULL of good things"
    So the range is between, legal and slightly improved. I am such a cynical bas
     
    • Like Like x 1
Loading...

Share This Page