The Mid-Grade Gasoline Myth: Don't Get Pumped by the Scam!
by AutoExpert | 27 March, 2024
Okay, here's the deal with mid-grade gasoline: it's one of the biggest scams in the car world. Most of us have stared at the pumps, wondering if we're cheaping out on our cars by getting regular... and then there it is, the tempting middle option. But guess what? It's basically useless.
Here's why: it all goes back to when gas used to have lead in it (remember those old movies?). That lead helped engines run better, but it was also poisoning everyone, so the government got rid of it. Problem is, gas stations still had that extra pump nozzle, and no one was going to waste perfectly good profit. So, what did they do? Mixed premium with regular and called it mid-grade, betting they could trick people into paying more. Sneaky, huh?
The catch (and here's where the automakers are in on it) is that basically no modern cars are made to run on mid-grade. Your car wants regular or premium, and that's it. Mid-grade is just a marketing trick to milk more cash out of folks who think they're getting something special.
Think of it like fancy bottled water. You could get generic from the tap for practically nothing, or pay a fortune for the stuff with minerals and electrolytes and whatever. Is it REALLY better for you? Probably not. Same with gas.
Even worse, most gas stations don't even keep a separate tank for mid-grade. They just mix together the regular and premium when you hit the pump! You're literally getting ripped off with a "special blend" they make on the fly. Ugh.
There ARE a few cars that need mid-grade – mostly those big Ram trucks and muscle cars from Dodge and Chrysler. But for everyone else, it's pointless. Higher octane in the gas won't magically make your engine run better if it wasn't designed for it.
So, save yourself the cash. Check your owner's manual to see what your car REALLY needs, and don't fall for the mid-grade hustle.