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Corolla Hybrid - 2018 Fuel spec.?

Discussion in 'Toyota Hybrids and EVs' started by davids45, May 26, 2018.

  1. davids45

    davids45 Active Member

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    G'day,

    Here in Oz, the Corolla Hybrid used to require so-called 'Premium' fuel. This expensive fuel is advertised as 95 RON so I'm assuming that's its only difference to Unleaded Regular (91 RON) and E10 (RON 94). Chemical energy per Litre (or gallon) is much the same as the Unleaded Regular, and a small increase over the E10, ethanol not having the same calorific value as 'equivalent' hydrocarbons it has replaced in the E10.

    Has anyone running a Corolla Hybrid tried E10 or local equivalent in place of 'Premium' to find the RON difference of 1 unit is significant or not?

    David S.
     
  2. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    I'd be curious to compare OZ op manual for Prius vs. Corolla Hybrid for same model year, regarding gaso requirement. I would not be aware of a reason for a fuel difference.

    By the way, it is interesting someone is quoting chemical energy per gallon, which ought to correlate well with MPG. We do not get that number in the USA.
     
  3. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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  4. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    The requirement for Premium 95 in Corolla Hybrid (and Gen 3 which it is based on) was one key to me going to Gen 4.

    My projection for Gen 4 was $5441 for 80,000km, for Gen 3 of Corolla Hybrid was $6689. Still a lot cheaper than a standard Corolla which would have cost about $13,537 for the same distance.

    David - where you'll probably come out in front is in resale - eventually - where Corolla Hybrid appears quite a bit in front of PRIUS, plus it's cheaper to insure than PRIUS.

    For those not in Australia, today, Unleaded 91 (Gen 4 spec) is $1.56/litre around the corner from me, whereas Premium 95 which Gen 3 requires is $1.68/litre.

    Sorry - forgot the last part of your question - no, don't know about E10 - but I've not found it to be very satisfactory in that it gives poorer fuel economy to Unleaded 91 in previous cars.
     
  5. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    I wonder why Toyota was specifying Premium for Gen3 in OZ? Alls I can think of better detergent package (whereas in USA the EPA makes the Regular have adequate detergent). Also it could be better MPG in OZ due to the energy content thing, assuming Toyota is concerned about meeting the as-advertized MPG.

    I'd say just use Regular in the Gen3 (in the USA market).
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Typically higher octane's for higher compression.
     
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  7. davids45

    davids45 Active Member

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    G'day,

    I'd agree with Mendel that (as far as I know :oops: ) the difference is simply due to the compression factor as indicated comparatively by the fuel's RON value.
    An engine designed to more greatly compress the fuel-air mixture before the spark-ignition needs a higher RON fuel to prevent pressure-induced pre-ignition before the spark plug arcs. The mixture burns before the engine is ready for it. Such pre-ignition affects the engine timing and running, and no doubt components if it goes on for too long.

    So I'm thinking the 'Premium'-needing Corolla's ICE has a higher compression engine design than my regular-is-fine Prius c's.

    But is the 1 RON difference between Premium (at 95 RON) and E10 (at 94 RON) noticeable in practice to anyone with the higher compression engine as per the Corolla hybrid (or other like-engined Toyota), where E10 94-RON is available?

    New car warranties notwithstanding ;) .

    David S.
     
  8. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Anybody know what Toyota calls for in Japan to fuel the Prii?

    I'm wondering if someone saw the engine compression ratio, and mistakeningly thought these cars needed higher octane.
    Premium gasoline is actually slightly lower in energy content than regular. Of course a high octane engine can make better use of that energy.
     
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  9. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Higher octane gasoline's main trait is it's harder to ignite, good for higher compression engines.
     
  10. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Also, engines do get detuned for North America due to the aversion of premium gasoline in non-luxury vehicles (see smart fortwo, and 1G Volt discussions on their respective forum). It's one reason why our Mazda3 runs at 13:1 instead of the 14:1 elsewhere in the world.

    The Prius does run a high compression ratio but because it's an Atkinson cycle, it's not the same as an Otto cycle with the identical ratio. (It's more like an effective compression ratio). Like @Trollbait said, it's possible someone mistook it as actual compression ratio like an Otto cycle and therefore thought that premium should be inserted.

    In North America, we run 87 AKI with E10 fuels. (only 91 AKI which is your 95 RON is ethanol-free)
     
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  11. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    Almost all Euro cars here specify either 95 or 98 (eg AMG versions are 98), as does LEXUS & Infinity here, most local cars except the higher powered ones were 91, Mazda - all 91 except MX-5, VW are all 95 except GTI which is 98. Mustang 4cyl is 91, V8 needs 98.

    TOYOTA - most are 91 except the Corolla Hybrid, Tarago V6, and Prius v which are 95 - and Toyota86 which is 98.
     
  12. padroo

    padroo Senior Member

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    Does the owners manual say premium fuel is required or suggested? Timing is adjusted according to the fuel you use in your car and some that are designed to run on premium run on a lower grade of fuel with the timing retarded. This is common in the US.
     
  13. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    TOYOTA's on-line sales documentation:
    upload_2018-5-28_23-13-43.png
     
  14. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    That's not always true in general. Although energy content varies, typically one way to get higher octane is by putting more aromatics into the Premium fuel, which increases energy. That is what a refinery does...makes more aromatics for the octane. Now then enter US EPA, who said aromatics are bad and they want to minimize aromatics. So in a USA regulated scenario, especially reformulated gasoline, it is true that (due to EPA gaso recipe demands) that Premium does not have much if any energy increase. But I suspect Premium in OZ or other countries might be juicy energy compared to USA. In the U.S. if you are out of RFG zones, I presume it is possible to find some Premium with more aromatics and energy, to the extent I perceive the variations allowable by EPA (re: small company exclusions, etc).

    Chevon says in their gaso info web page (if still on-line - I have posted here in the past) that in RFG areas you should not expect more energy content in Premium, with some possible increase outside RFG areas, which is all I am trying to say.
     
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  15. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    We got regular gas at a Chevron up the coast from us in a small town (Powell River), and I'm not sure how/why, but that was the tank that couldn't be beat: at least 10% better mpg, without breathing hard. (n)
     
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  16. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Nothing (except US EPA) prevents having a higher energy Premium or Regular. Premium does not have to be higher energy, it just could be, depending on refinery recipe choices, which in the US, there is not as much choice or variation as EPA controls it.
     
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  17. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    I suspect Mazda is the exception, in that most of the others don't make actual changes to the engine, and just publish the various numbers for running it on a less than ideal fuel, if they even do that. It is all GM did for the 1.4L turbo in the Sonic.

    This could raise a consumer beware scenario, at least in the US. The test gasoline for emissions and fuel economy is high octane(93 for EPA and 91 for CARB). So differences seen real world and window sticker in an engine "designed" for regular can include the octane difference as a reason.
    Or expansion ratio.
    This varies by market in the US. Premium can have ethanol, and some places still have ethanol free regular available.
    The statement of whether premium is required or recommended is likely buried in the owner's manual in the fuel section.

    Which reminds me, if the manual says 10% ethanol is okay to use, then Australia's E10 is fine to use instead of the high octane gas. The slight difference in octane won't be an issue, but the lower energy content from the ethanol will lower fuel economy.
    Ethanol was used as an octane booster before the mandate in some regions; it came down to cost. Two of the commonly used aromatics for raising octane are xylene and toluene; both of which have value on their own. They both have a lower heat value (40.xMJ/kg) than octane(44.4MJ/kg), and while they are denser, their effective octane ratings, 118 and 121 respectively, means not much is needed to increase gasoline's.
    Heat of combustion - Wikipedia
    Gasoline's heat value ranges around 44 to 46 MJ/kg.
    Heat values of various fuels - World Nuclear Association


    What I should have stated was that the difference between regular and premium energy content is too small to be a reason for Toyota to call for premium in the Prius to ensure owners get the best fuel economy. If it is getting better fuel economy, it is because the engine can more efficiently make use of higher octanes.
     
    #17 Trollbait, May 28, 2018
    Last edited: May 28, 2018
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  18. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    @Trollbait you still with us? Can you speak freely??
     
  19. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Yes, poor proofreading there.
     
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  20. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Ahh that's for clarify. In Canada, I'm pretty sure 91 is ethanol-free. Why would they put E10 in the 91 formula in the US? Or I guess maybe it's a lower % like E5.

    E0 87 is getting hard to find in Canada - maybe in the smaller towns/villages. Alberta (Calgary/Edmonton) used to have ethanol-free fuel up to about 3-4 years ago.