EcoModder.com

EcoModder.com (https://ecomodder.com/forum/)
-   Success Stories (https://ecomodder.com/forum/success-stories.html)
-   -   Newbie here and non supermarket petrol (https://ecomodder.com/forum/showthread.php/newbie-here-non-supermarket-petrol-13383.html)

Redmie44 05-27-2010 05:11 PM

Newbie here and non supermarket petrol
 
:confused:

Hi All

The thingy is I have a V reg suzuki wagon with full service history.

2 weeks ago 90 miles on £12.10 for 10.01 ltrs @ £120.9 ppltr unleaded supermarket petrol, not bad I though, is that 45 mpg round town in the evenings mostly delivering irong for me' wife.

BP 125 miles last week £12.63 for 10.11 ltrs @ £124.9 ppltr, gives me loads more mpg but not sure how many :eek:

Could it be better to get er decent petrol than cheapest???

Again hello all, roll on the summer.

Simon
Le11

Neddy Seagoon 05-28-2010 05:39 AM

I would stay with the better grades of gas (petrol), I have heard horror stories about supermarket gas in Limey Land. I stick to good gas when over in the UK. Why do you think they can sell it cheaper!
I still say you guys are getting ripped off, I paid $.92 cents per liter last night here in Ontario for my car.
Good luck, Neddy.

honestabe 05-28-2010 11:49 AM

Taxes Neddy. You Canadians pay a lot more for fuel than us Americans. Although the Europeans get taxed all to hell compared to you and I. In March those in the UK were paying about $6.55/gallon while us Americans were paying only $3.05/gallon while Ontario, Canadians were paying about $3.69/gallon. Taxes is what kills the cost of gasoline and diesel, not the cost of oil per barrel.

Arragonis 05-28-2010 06:45 PM

Hi, and welcome.

Short answer - go for wherever your cheapest fuel comes from.

In the UK supermarkets have a load of purchasing power so they get their fuel from the same refiners as the big fuel company stations (e.g. BP, Shell, Mobil etc.), same additives, same processing. Your fuel filter will pick up a load of crap if there is any and a new one is a few quid and 2 minutes to change.

If you have a fetish for some kind of special fuel (e.g. Shell VPower) then go and visit a Shell garage and you will get whatever extra goodness that may offer (which in my view is zero), otherwise supermarkets are fine. Supermarket stations also have the following advantages :

a) they often use fuel as a loss leader, so they are cheaper.
b) have a strong throughput which means their tanks are refilled more often, so less chance for dirt and crap to settle.
c) there is usually a "fuel for shopping" or a "shopping for fuel" discount on.

You will see much more benefit from the 100 tips thread on here especially with a petrol car.

Good luck and keep tapping experiences. We in the UK need more presence here :thumbup:

honestabe 05-29-2010 02:49 AM

I'm lucky in that where I live I pass an indian casino on my way to and from work that has a Chevron gas station and is always cheaper than the discount gas stations like ARCO. High quality gas at the cheapest rate, hell yeah!

Arragonis 05-29-2010 04:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by honestabe (Post 176595)
Taxes Neddy. You Canadians pay a lot more for fuel than us Americans. Although the Europeans get taxed all to hell compared to you and I. In March those in the UK were paying about $6.55/gallon while us Americans were paying only $3.05/gallon while Ontario, Canadians were paying about $3.69/gallon. Taxes is what kills the cost of gasoline and diesel, not the cost of oil per barrel.

Current UK price for Diesel is 1.21GBP a litre, petrol is a couple of pence less - almost 75% is tax. The up sides of this are :

- Free health care (but not dentists ironically :D)

- More economical cars

- Insulation from the usd/barrell prices rises

honestabe 05-29-2010 12:33 PM

I admit, I really do wish that we got some of the cars the Europeans do (like the Volkswagon Blue Motion Polo).

ShadeTreeMech 05-29-2010 08:09 PM

I remember paying 79 cents for 3.8 liters and I'm not that old!

It should be a crime that gordon brown sticks it to you all every time you get petrol. (or is it the new bloke?) Seems there is a government official with gold lined pockets in the land of the not-so-free.

Being able to get a VW blue motion sounds like a wet dream to me :D

RichMo 05-25-2016 04:38 AM

I was amazed how cheap it is to fill your car up when I visited the US recently. We get totally ripped off on fuel prices here!

steddie 07-23-2016 01:30 AM

G'day there,
You are all lucky with such a low price for fuel, here in New Zealand we pay a lot more for fuel, like at the moment $1.85 NZ dollar per litre that is about....$7.00 per US gallon or $8.41 GB gallon for regular that includes roadtax orfor diesel, 1.05 NZ dollar per litre and that is about...$3.98 US gallon or $4.78 GB gallon, But...with a diesel car you have to pay roadtax on top of the fuel price and that is 6.2 cents per KM, that is 10 cents per mile, that is upto 3.5 tonne, any heavier then it spirals out of control and roadtax kms have to be bought in advance, if stopped by cops and are not upto date with the milage, the fines are very high, also to register a diesel car for the anual registration was also $140 dollars more than a petrol/gas car and that works out for a car not very economical anymore.
Ive had 5 diesel cars and for that reason i went back to a petrol/gas car.
Now you can say....oh that is only....GB pounds or.....US dollars but.....We earn here New Zealand dollars, so that makes no sense to us here cos for us its very expensive.
Have a nice day and Greetings,
Eddie.

MJamson 08-06-2016 04:00 AM

There was a magazine article many years ago in England where they tested fuels from different stations.

The supermarkets gave the lowest mpgs, however there is the money saving.

Many years ago now I choose a particular brand of station and used only that station for 4-6 weeks, then I changed to a different station and did the same.

In the end I found that the branded stations overall were better for me, I haven't lived in England for 6 years now, but I think that it was BP that gave me the best, (I can picture the station, just can't remember the name). Although the supermarkets were cheaper the lower mpg meant that it cost me more.

I did read that not all fuels are equal, and that the super markets buy the lower quality fuels, plus the premium stations often have extra additives in with the fuels.

Mike

MobilOne 08-07-2016 12:37 AM

Yesterday, I paid US $1.71 per US gallon in Birmingham, Alabama. The flip side of the cheap gas is that everything is spread out. Every time I go after something, it is 15 or more miles, usually more.
Plus, in the US, our public transportation is generally inconvenient to use and often non-existant.

steddie 08-07-2016 05:24 PM

G'day MobilOne,
WOW that is cheap $1.71 per US gallon, we pay that per liter for Petrol/gas, there is 3.88 litres in a US gallon, so you can see how we get ripped off here in New Zealand. diesel fuel is around a dollar per liter but unlike petrol where the roadtax is part of the price you pay at the pump, it is seperate for diesel and about 10 cent per mile, and that has to be payed in advance + a diesel car cost 140 dollar more to register every year for some stupid reason .
They have priced diesel cars of the road here and for that reason i have gone back to a petrol car, after having had 5 diesel cars.
Greetings,
Eddie.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:11 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.5.2
All content copyright EcoModder.com