Road rules4 mins ago
Supermarket Petrol V. Name Brand Petrol
Friend who is a retired petrol station owner swears supermarket petrol damages your engine due to the additives they put in it.
Anyone know if this is true?
Anyone know if this is true?
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This harks back to the famous Nikasil bore issue suffered by some BMW engines in the late nineties. It was caused by high sulphur content of cheap supermarket fuels in the north at that time. I'm pretty sure now that the supermarkets have stopped buying the poorly refined fuels now but I still don't trust them entirely.
//Back in my 'trade plating' days (delivering cars across the country) I hitched quite a few lifts with tanker drivers. They all told me that the petrol that they delivered to supermarkets came out of the same tanks as the petrol they delivered to other filling stations.//
chris - i read somewhere that the tankers firstly go through different entrances at the refineries to take on the different additives , according to which company they are filling up to deliver to - e.g shell / total etc, for their non standard petrol .
They then proceed to the same tank that is used for other filling stations to fill up
chris - i read somewhere that the tankers firstly go through different entrances at the refineries to take on the different additives , according to which company they are filling up to deliver to - e.g shell / total etc, for their non standard petrol .
They then proceed to the same tank that is used for other filling stations to fill up
-- answer removed --
All petrol and diesel sold in the UK must meet British Standards, so filling up at supermarkets is just as safe for your engine as doing so at a "branded" garage.
Every petrol station uses a standard ‘base’ fuel which comes from the same UK refineries but different petrol retailers use different additives. The RAC and the AA both confirm that petrol and diesel fuel quality is governed by the same European standard, wherever it’s sold.
Approx 50% of the petrol and diesel is bought at supermarket pumps. If it were to be inferior, then we would probably have heard about it by now.
Every petrol station uses a standard ‘base’ fuel which comes from the same UK refineries but different petrol retailers use different additives. The RAC and the AA both confirm that petrol and diesel fuel quality is governed by the same European standard, wherever it’s sold.
Approx 50% of the petrol and diesel is bought at supermarket pumps. If it were to be inferior, then we would probably have heard about it by now.
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