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Stupid question about 'leaded' gas

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Renthorin

Lone Wolf
Joined
May 24, 2001
Messages
3,031
So I told a buddy I will be replacing my spark plugs and he asked how many miles on them. Said 30k and he said "nah..they are good for 100k these days".

I told him I run leaded fuel and the seem to foul quicker.

That lead to the discussion of what makes high-octane fuel high-octane.

He said the reason they put the 'lead' into the fuel is for the octane. I thought it was to protect the valve parts.

Is it both? Is it one or the other?

I didn't think lead had anything to do with octane and then I read this:

Tetra-ethyl lead - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Help a confused boy out here....


will
 
its for octane but it did lube the valve seats , on cars built before leaded fuel the seats werent hardened like they are today

and with high ppm leaded fuel like c16 i'd change them after every race , some do them after every run
for lower ppm fuel like 100LL (which has lead)you could drive an NA motor a few thousand miles before you'd notice a problem from the lead fouling but i would put fresh plugs in before i got on it with a turbocharged engine
 
Can't be good for the 02 sensor either. I believe they make unleaded race fuel but I could be wrong. Just heard that somewhere.
 
they make 100 and 104 though I can never find them. I get about 4k miles to an o2 sensor (Denso) but as easy and inexpensive as they are....that's ok :-)

I'm just bummed that he was right about the lead being the high octane part though I did say it was for valve train protection...so...we are both right.
 
Tetraethyl lead was added primarily as an anti-knock compound...slowed the burn rate.
 
oh sure....no dealers in Michigan :-(

I like my turbo blue 110...just didn't think the lead was the reason it was high octane.
 
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