Boostane vs Torco test results
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#3
Le Mans Master
If your car wasn't pulling timing beforehand, then no amount of additional octane will improve performance (and in fact, will hurt it). This test might determine that you're not octane limited perhaps? But without something to increase octane demand, not sure what this reveals.
Ideally you'd want some scenario where you were experiencing knock counts, add an octane product, repeat the scenario, and have those knock counts (and accompanying retard) to go away.
I'm not ragging on you though, it's incredibly hard to measure octane. In fact a dedicated one-cylinder machine used to be used, might still be!
Ideally you'd want some scenario where you were experiencing knock counts, add an octane product, repeat the scenario, and have those knock counts (and accompanying retard) to go away.
I'm not ragging on you though, it's incredibly hard to measure octane. In fact a dedicated one-cylinder machine used to be used, might still be!
Last edited by davepl; 04-24-2017 at 11:38 AM.
#4
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https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...post1594595166
Last edited by Warp Factor; 04-24-2017 at 12:45 PM.
#7
If your car wasn't pulling timing beforehand, then no amount of additional octane will improve performance (and in fact, will hurt it). This test might determine that you're not octane limited perhaps? But without something to increase octane demand, not sure what this reveals.
Ideally you'd want some scenario where you were experiencing knock counts, add an octane product, repeat the scenario, and have those knock counts (and accompanying retard) to go away.
I'm not ragging on you though, it's incredibly hard to measure octane. In fact a dedicated one-cylinder machine used to be used, might still be!
Ideally you'd want some scenario where you were experiencing knock counts, add an octane product, repeat the scenario, and have those knock counts (and accompanying retard) to go away.
I'm not ragging on you though, it's incredibly hard to measure octane. In fact a dedicated one-cylinder machine used to be used, might still be!
#8
Le Mans Master
I did a bunch of research on this last week for a twin-turbo project I am about to dyno; I want about 100-104 octane as a "safety" measure.
You can get race gas shipped to your house, but for 10 gallons the hazmat fees are about $150 on TOP of the shipping, so that's not really practical. I can drive a 2 hour round trip to buy it, but that's not great either.
The best compromise for me was to buy Race-Gas concentrate and add it to 92. A single 32oz can to a 5-gal jug of 92 should give me 104 octane.
If it lives up to its marketing, it'll be perfect. If!
You can get race gas shipped to your house, but for 10 gallons the hazmat fees are about $150 on TOP of the shipping, so that's not really practical. I can drive a 2 hour round trip to buy it, but that's not great either.
The best compromise for me was to buy Race-Gas concentrate and add it to 92. A single 32oz can to a 5-gal jug of 92 should give me 104 octane.
If it lives up to its marketing, it'll be perfect. If!
Last edited by davepl; 04-24-2017 at 12:15 PM.
#9
Le Mans Master
They DEFINITELY pull timing stock.. a minimum of 4-5* on 93 octane. I've scanned mine and a buddy's...
I haven't tested any octane boosters yet but it definitely has to help with the stock tune and it's sensitive knock sensor settings.
I haven't tested any octane boosters yet but it definitely has to help with the stock tune and it's sensitive knock sensor settings.
#10
Safety Car
I think your results speak for themselves. These results agree with what I have found at the track. I found Boostane to be superior to Torco with 'less' of it in the 93 octane mix than Torco as recommended here. Boostane also leaves the sparkplugs cleaner. I have mention these findings in a few of my posts that seem to fall on deaf eyes. This thread however may have opened some eyes.
Note: I still have a unopened can of Torco on the shelve where it will most likely stay. I maybe wrong on this one but I remember paying less for the 32 ounce cans of Boostane (maybe on sale at the time and from the manufacturer I believe) than for the same size cans of Torco and that probably is why I tried it along with a recommendation on this site that they were similar in performance but Boostane was cleaner. I vote for clean.
Note: I still have a unopened can of Torco on the shelve where it will most likely stay. I maybe wrong on this one but I remember paying less for the 32 ounce cans of Boostane (maybe on sale at the time and from the manufacturer I believe) than for the same size cans of Torco and that probably is why I tried it along with a recommendation on this site that they were similar in performance but Boostane was cleaner. I vote for clean.
Last edited by C7/Z06 Man; 04-24-2017 at 01:55 PM.
#11
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I did a bunch of research on this last week for a twin-turbo project I am about to dyno; I want about 100-104 octane as a "safety" measure.
You can get race gas shipped to your house, but for 10 gallons the hazmat fees are about $150 on TOP of the shipping, so that's not really practical. I can drive a 2 hour round trip to buy it, but that's not great either.
The best compromise for me was to buy Race-Gas concentrate and add it to 92. A single 32oz can to a 5-gal jug of 92 should give me 104 octane.
If it lives up to its marketing, it'll be perfect. If!
You can get race gas shipped to your house, but for 10 gallons the hazmat fees are about $150 on TOP of the shipping, so that's not really practical. I can drive a 2 hour round trip to buy it, but that's not great either.
The best compromise for me was to buy Race-Gas concentrate and add it to 92. A single 32oz can to a 5-gal jug of 92 should give me 104 octane.
If it lives up to its marketing, it'll be perfect. If!
Later, I found that I could make do with pump gas, along with water injection, on that particular blower motor (Big Block Chevy, making about 1000 horsepower).
I think your results speak for themselves. These results agree with what I have found at the track. I found Boostane to be superior to Torco with less of it in the 93 octane mix than Torco. Boostane also leaves the sparkplugs cleaner. I have mention these findings in a few of my posts that seem to fall on deaf eyes.
I used to run the drags on a regular basis, but the boredom of waiting between rounds finally got to me. Maybe I'll run the C7Z at the drags at some point, or maybe not, but if I do, I'd like to put down a decent ET.
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C7/Z06 Man (04-24-2017)
#12
Safety Car
Correct me if I'm wrong but I have seen as much as 32 ounce can of Torco added to 5 gallons of 93 gas on here.
Last edited by C7/Z06 Man; 04-24-2017 at 02:17 PM.
#13
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St. Jude Donor '05
I used 16 ounces of Boostane to 'approx.' 8 gallons of 93 gas at the time but you could always go more; up to say 'even' what has been recommended on here for Torco.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I have seen as much as 32 ounce can of Torco added to 5 gallons of 93 gas on here.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I have seen as much as 32 ounce can of Torco added to 5 gallons of 93 gas on here.
Half a tank of gas is approx how many gallons? If you had half a tank, would you notice a difference with 16 oz vs 32 oz of the boostane?
#14
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I used 16 ounces of Boostane to 'approx.' 8 gallons of 93 gas at the time but you could always go more; up to say 'even' what has been recommended on here for Torco.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I have seen as much as 32 ounce can of Torco added to 5 gallons of 93 gas on here.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I have seen as much as 32 ounce can of Torco added to 5 gallons of 93 gas on here.
An interesting aside is that this wasn't delivered on a truck with a "lift" tailgate or anything. The "good-ol'-boy" delivery guy would place an old truck tire on the ground to absorb the impact, and just roll the barrel off the back of the truck (maybe a four-foot drop, never any damage to the barrel).
I've never experimented with octane booster additives other than toluene (which worked quite well, but the price of toluene kept going up to the point that the barrels of race gas were a better value).
Last edited by Warp Factor; 04-24-2017 at 03:18 PM.
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#16
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St. Jude Donor '08
Thanks for doing the test, I put in a 32oz can of Torco on every fill up, about 12 gallons of 91... I'm tuned on that mixture...
I also get minimum build up on plugs, of which I'm still on the first set with my Z, having run Torco in every tank from VERY early on, got about 5K on the car now...
I've NEVER had an adverse effect from Torco in over 10 years of use, seems they are both pretty close in performance, and since Torco has been around for well over 15 years, I'd say the other guys may have talked to an old employee...
Price wise, Torco works for me!!
I also get minimum build up on plugs, of which I'm still on the first set with my Z, having run Torco in every tank from VERY early on, got about 5K on the car now...
I've NEVER had an adverse effect from Torco in over 10 years of use, seems they are both pretty close in performance, and since Torco has been around for well over 15 years, I'd say the other guys may have talked to an old employee...
Price wise, Torco works for me!!
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SpeedyD (04-24-2017)
#17
Race Director
Thanks - nice info!!
First of all - were you using Boostane Premium or Professional??
Second of all - a 32 oz can of Boostane is more expensive than a 32 oz can of Torco, but I don't think you need to use as much Boostane to get your required higher octane.
Third of all - in your test, if you used the same quantity of each product in the same amount of gasoline, you'll have different octane ratings for each batch - and I think the Boostane blend would be higher. That could surely affect the results of your testing.
I haven't use Boostane yet, but I agree with C7/Z06 Man's post.
I have the 100 octane tune on my 2016 M7 Z06/Z07, and I've been using Torco to bring 93 up to about 100 octane. That has required about 24 oz of Torco for every 10 gals of 93 octane according to this Torco blend chart:
http://torcoracefuel.net/2-docs/acce...r-ratio-93.gif
I need some more octane booster, so last week I ordered some Boostane Professional. One of the problems with Boostane blending is that different references have different amounts required to achieve a particular end result octane.
But, no matter which blend chart I use, I've found that LESS Boostane should be required per gal of 93 to get the required octane I want. Here's the mixing chart from Boostane's site:
https://boostane.com/about-boostane/...e-mixing-chart
With Boostane Professional, to turn 93 into 100 octane, I need a ratio of 138.9:1. 10 gallons of 93 octane gas in 1,280 ounces. Divide that by 138.9 and you get 9.2 ounces of Boostane Professional will be needed to turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane. 12.8 oz of Boostane Premium will turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane.
It looks like the Torco chart shows that it will take about 22+ oz of Torco in 10 gallons of 93 to get a 100 octane result.
Your mixture of 16 oz of each of the products per 11 gals gives the blended result different octanes in the 11 gals with Torco than the 11 gals with Boostane.
The Torco chart shows your 11 gals with Torco would have a final octane of slightly less than 98 octane.
The 11 gals with Boostane is a higher octane. 11 gals is 1,408 oz. Divide that by the 16 oz of Boostane you added and you get a 88:1 ratio. Looking at the Boostane mixing chart, it shows that you would have a final octane of either just slightly more than 100 octane if you use Premium, or maybe 101.4 if you used Professional Boostane.
So.....in your test, 11 gals of 93 with 16 oz of Boostane had a higher resulting octane than the 11 gals with 16 oz of Torco.
And....a 32 oz can of Boostane costs more than a 32 oz can of Torco. However, because you may need less Boostane per gallon to get the higher octane you need, Boostane may be cheaper overall.
Just MHO!!!
.
First of all - were you using Boostane Premium or Professional??
Second of all - a 32 oz can of Boostane is more expensive than a 32 oz can of Torco, but I don't think you need to use as much Boostane to get your required higher octane.
Third of all - in your test, if you used the same quantity of each product in the same amount of gasoline, you'll have different octane ratings for each batch - and I think the Boostane blend would be higher. That could surely affect the results of your testing.
I haven't use Boostane yet, but I agree with C7/Z06 Man's post.
I have the 100 octane tune on my 2016 M7 Z06/Z07, and I've been using Torco to bring 93 up to about 100 octane. That has required about 24 oz of Torco for every 10 gals of 93 octane according to this Torco blend chart:
http://torcoracefuel.net/2-docs/acce...r-ratio-93.gif
I need some more octane booster, so last week I ordered some Boostane Professional. One of the problems with Boostane blending is that different references have different amounts required to achieve a particular end result octane.
But, no matter which blend chart I use, I've found that LESS Boostane should be required per gal of 93 to get the required octane I want. Here's the mixing chart from Boostane's site:
https://boostane.com/about-boostane/...e-mixing-chart
With Boostane Professional, to turn 93 into 100 octane, I need a ratio of 138.9:1. 10 gallons of 93 octane gas in 1,280 ounces. Divide that by 138.9 and you get 9.2 ounces of Boostane Professional will be needed to turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane. 12.8 oz of Boostane Premium will turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane.
It looks like the Torco chart shows that it will take about 22+ oz of Torco in 10 gallons of 93 to get a 100 octane result.
Your mixture of 16 oz of each of the products per 11 gals gives the blended result different octanes in the 11 gals with Torco than the 11 gals with Boostane.
The Torco chart shows your 11 gals with Torco would have a final octane of slightly less than 98 octane.
The 11 gals with Boostane is a higher octane. 11 gals is 1,408 oz. Divide that by the 16 oz of Boostane you added and you get a 88:1 ratio. Looking at the Boostane mixing chart, it shows that you would have a final octane of either just slightly more than 100 octane if you use Premium, or maybe 101.4 if you used Professional Boostane.
So.....in your test, 11 gals of 93 with 16 oz of Boostane had a higher resulting octane than the 11 gals with 16 oz of Torco.
And....a 32 oz can of Boostane costs more than a 32 oz can of Torco. However, because you may need less Boostane per gallon to get the higher octane you need, Boostane may be cheaper overall.
Just MHO!!!
.
Last edited by BEZ06; 04-27-2017 at 03:44 PM.
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Z0Sick6 (04-24-2017)
#18
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St. Jude Donor '05
Thanks - nice info!!
First of all - were you using Boostane Premium or Professional??
Second of all - a 32 oz can of Boostane is more expensive than a 32 oz can of Torco, but I don't think you need to use as much Boostane to get your required higher octane.
Third of all - in your test, if you used the same quantity of each product in the same amount of gasoline, you'll have different octane ratings for each batch - and I think the Boostane blend would be higher. That could surely affect the results of your testing.
I haven't use Boostane yet, but I agree with C7/Z06 Man's post.
I have the 100 octane tune on my 2016 M7 Z06/Z07, and I've been using Torco to bring 93 up to about 100 octane. That has required about 24 oz of Torco for every 10 gals of 93 octane according to this Torco blend chart:
http://torcoracefuel.net/2-docs/acce...r-ratio-93.gif
I need some more octane booster, so last week I ordered some Boostane Professional. One of the problems with Boostane blending is that different references have different amounts required to achieve a particular end result octane.
But, no matter which blend chart I use, I've found that LESS Boostane should be required per gal of 93 to get the required octane I want. Here's the mixing chart from Boostane's site:
https://boostane.com/about-boostane/...e-mixing-chart
With Boostane Professional, to turn 93 into 100 octane, I need a ratio of 138.9:1. 10 gallons of 93 octane gas in 1,280 ounces. Divide that by 138.9 and you get 9.2 ounces of Boostane Professional will be needed to turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane. 12.8 oz of Boostane Premium will turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane.
It looks like the Torco chart shows that it will take 16 oz of Torco in 10 gallons of 93 to get a 100 octane result.
Your mixture of 16 oz of each of the products per 11 gals gives the blended result different octanes in the 11 gals with Torco than the 11 gals with Boostane.
The Torco chart shows your 11 gals with Torco would have a final octane of slightly less than 98 octane.
The 11 gals with Boostane is a higher octane. 11 gals is 1,408 oz. Divide that by the 16 oz of Boostane you added and you get a 88:1 ratio. Looking at the Boostane mixing chart, it shows that you would have a final octane of either just slightly more than 100 octane if you use Premium, or maybe 101.4 if you used Professional Boostane.
So.....in your test, 11 gals of 93 with 16 oz of Boostane had a higher resulting octane than the 11 gals with 16 oz of Torco.
And....a 32 oz can of Boostane costs more than a 32 oz can of Torco. However, because you may need less Boostane per gallon to get the higher octane you need, Boostane may be cheaper overall.
Just MHO!!!
.
First of all - were you using Boostane Premium or Professional??
Second of all - a 32 oz can of Boostane is more expensive than a 32 oz can of Torco, but I don't think you need to use as much Boostane to get your required higher octane.
Third of all - in your test, if you used the same quantity of each product in the same amount of gasoline, you'll have different octane ratings for each batch - and I think the Boostane blend would be higher. That could surely affect the results of your testing.
I haven't use Boostane yet, but I agree with C7/Z06 Man's post.
I have the 100 octane tune on my 2016 M7 Z06/Z07, and I've been using Torco to bring 93 up to about 100 octane. That has required about 24 oz of Torco for every 10 gals of 93 octane according to this Torco blend chart:
http://torcoracefuel.net/2-docs/acce...r-ratio-93.gif
I need some more octane booster, so last week I ordered some Boostane Professional. One of the problems with Boostane blending is that different references have different amounts required to achieve a particular end result octane.
But, no matter which blend chart I use, I've found that LESS Boostane should be required per gal of 93 to get the required octane I want. Here's the mixing chart from Boostane's site:
https://boostane.com/about-boostane/...e-mixing-chart
With Boostane Professional, to turn 93 into 100 octane, I need a ratio of 138.9:1. 10 gallons of 93 octane gas in 1,280 ounces. Divide that by 138.9 and you get 9.2 ounces of Boostane Professional will be needed to turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane. 12.8 oz of Boostane Premium will turn 10 gals of 93 into 100 octane.
It looks like the Torco chart shows that it will take 16 oz of Torco in 10 gallons of 93 to get a 100 octane result.
Your mixture of 16 oz of each of the products per 11 gals gives the blended result different octanes in the 11 gals with Torco than the 11 gals with Boostane.
The Torco chart shows your 11 gals with Torco would have a final octane of slightly less than 98 octane.
The 11 gals with Boostane is a higher octane. 11 gals is 1,408 oz. Divide that by the 16 oz of Boostane you added and you get a 88:1 ratio. Looking at the Boostane mixing chart, it shows that you would have a final octane of either just slightly more than 100 octane if you use Premium, or maybe 101.4 if you used Professional Boostane.
So.....in your test, 11 gals of 93 with 16 oz of Boostane had a higher resulting octane than the 11 gals with 16 oz of Torco.
And....a 32 oz can of Boostane costs more than a 32 oz can of Torco. However, because you may need less Boostane per gallon to get the higher octane you need, Boostane may be cheaper overall.
Just MHO!!!
.
Utilizing Torco 16 oz for that same amount, you get 2 uses of it... a 32 oz bottle of torco is roughly $22.75... so it winds up averaging the same cost per application.
Last edited by Z0Sick6; 04-24-2017 at 04:29 PM.
#19
Race Director
I dunno!?!?
I haven't received my order of Boostane Professional yet - and I won't use it until my next track event the end of June at the NCM HPDE at VIR. I run 93 octane for the street.
HOWEVER - my math shows the Boostane will be cheaper to use in order to achieve 100 octane.
My last case of 6 quart cans of Torco was from eBay for a total of $125.70 delivered to my door.
The case of 6 quart cans of Boostane Pro I ordered will be here tomorrow. It was from eBay as well for a total of $165.95 to my door.
6 quarts of each product is a total of 192 ounces. Divide the price of each by 192 oz, and I get:
Butt.....to increase 10 gallons of 93 octane to 100 octane I need:
Bottom line - it appears to me that the Boostane Pro will be a bit cheaper for the end result of increasing 93 octane to 100 octane.
Just MHO, YMMV (Your Math May Vary!!!)
.
I haven't received my order of Boostane Professional yet - and I won't use it until my next track event the end of June at the NCM HPDE at VIR. I run 93 octane for the street.
HOWEVER - my math shows the Boostane will be cheaper to use in order to achieve 100 octane.
My last case of 6 quart cans of Torco was from eBay for a total of $125.70 delivered to my door.
The case of 6 quart cans of Boostane Pro I ordered will be here tomorrow. It was from eBay as well for a total of $165.95 to my door.
6 quarts of each product is a total of 192 ounces. Divide the price of each by 192 oz, and I get:
Boostane Pro - 86.4 cents/oz
Torco - 65.5 cents/oz
So....Torco is cheaper per ounceTorco - 65.5 cents/oz
Butt.....to increase 10 gallons of 93 octane to 100 octane I need:
Boostane Pro - 9.2 ounces x $.864/oz = $7.95
Torco - 16 ounces x $.655/oz = $10.48
Torco - 16 ounces x $.655/oz = $10.48
Bottom line - it appears to me that the Boostane Pro will be a bit cheaper for the end result of increasing 93 octane to 100 octane.
Just MHO, YMMV (Your Math May Vary!!!)
.
Last edited by BEZ06; 04-24-2017 at 05:19 PM.
#20
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St. Jude Donor '08
I dunno!?!?
I haven't received my order of Boostane Professional yet - and I won't use it until my next track event the end of June at the NCM HPDE at VIR. I run 93 octane for the street.
HOWEVER - my math shows the Boostane will be cheaper to use in order to achieve 100 octane.
My last case of 6 quart cans of Torco was from eBay for a total of $125.70 delivered to my door.
The case of 6 quart cans of Boostane Pro I ordered will be here tomorrow. I was from eBay as well for a total of $165.95 to my door.
6 quarts of each product is a total of 192 ounces. Divide the price of each by 192 oz, and I get:
Butt.....to increase 10 gallons of 93 octane to 100 octane I need:
Bottom line - it appears to me that the Boostane Pro will be a bit cheaper for the end result of increasing 93 octane to 100 octane.
Just MHO, YMMV (Your Math May Vary!!!)
.
I haven't received my order of Boostane Professional yet - and I won't use it until my next track event the end of June at the NCM HPDE at VIR. I run 93 octane for the street.
HOWEVER - my math shows the Boostane will be cheaper to use in order to achieve 100 octane.
My last case of 6 quart cans of Torco was from eBay for a total of $125.70 delivered to my door.
The case of 6 quart cans of Boostane Pro I ordered will be here tomorrow. I was from eBay as well for a total of $165.95 to my door.
6 quarts of each product is a total of 192 ounces. Divide the price of each by 192 oz, and I get:
Boostane Pro - 86.4 cents/oz
Torco - 65.5 cents/oz
So....Torco is cheaper per ounceTorco - 65.5 cents/oz
Butt.....to increase 10 gallons of 93 octane to 100 octane I need:
Boostane Pro - 9.2 ounces x $.864/oz = $7.95
Torco - 16 ounces x $.655/oz = $10.48
Torco - 16 ounces x $.655/oz = $10.48
Bottom line - it appears to me that the Boostane Pro will be a bit cheaper for the end result of increasing 93 octane to 100 octane.
Just MHO, YMMV (Your Math May Vary!!!)
.
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SpeedyD (04-28-2017)