You are here:
Forums
SUVs
Chevrolet Equinox
Chevrolet Equinox Maintenance and Repair

1523 messages, Last post on Nov 17, 2009 at 5:23 PM
You are in the Chevrolet Equinox Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & tidester
|
Replying to: jim_dandy (Aug 22, 2008 1:31 pm) |
|
|
Replying to: jim_dandy (Aug 22, 2008 1:31 pm) Now on the other hand each gas company uses different additives, which can make a difference in cleaning properties if anything. Using High Test is a waste if your car doesn't call for it. At the station I worked at over the years, I leased new cars and bought old cars and none of my cars ever had any problems. The main key was that we changed the filters in the gas pumps once a month, and pumped out residual water build up in the tanks once a month. One thing I highly recommend is is to never, never, get gas at a station if you see a tank wagon unloading fuel, that can be the beginning of some of your problems to come. Most important change your fuel filter every 20,000 miles no questions asked and use the Chevron Techron that J Dandy recommended it's the best. |
|
|
Replying to: jim_dandy (Aug 22, 2008 1:31 pm)
|
|
|
Sorry, didn't mean to offend anyone by using the term "Cheap Gas". Unfortunately, even the more expensive gas may not have the appropriate additives. Gasoline quality is an issue few people think about. The formation of harmful deposits can be controlled by adding detergent-dispersants to gasoline, the most common of which is polybutene succinimide. Used with a petroleum carrier oil, detergent-dispersants help keep the intake manifold and ports clean. These chemicals are more effective than the carburetor detergents that were once used in gasoline, but they must be used at concentrations that are three to five times higher than the older carburetor detergents. At the "High" end of the fuel quality spectrum are "Top Tier" gasolines. These fuels are recognized by the vehicle manufacturers as having the most effective additives and in the highest concentrations. Gasoline retailers must meet the high Top Tier standards with all their grades of gasoline (not just premium) to be designed as a Top Tier supplier. In addition, all the gasoline outlets carrying the brand of approved gasoline must also meet the same standards. Gasoline retailers who are currently on the Top Tier list include Chevron, Chevron-Canada (B.C. only), Texaco (Chevron supplied only), Conoco, Entec Stations, Kwik Trip/Kwik Star, MFA Oil Company, Phillips, QuikTrip, Shell, The Somerset Refinery and 76. Unfortunately, fuel quality isn't something that is easily policed. Many states have programs in place to monitor fuel quality on either an ongoing basis or "incident specific" basis. Most are run by the state's "Department of Weights and Measures". Even so, the focus of most of these programs is to make sure consumers aren't being cheated at the pump and get the full gallon they pay for. Some programs also check fuels to make sure they do not contain too much alcohol. The specific density of gasoline can be field tested to determine its volatility and alcohol content. But testing octane and the amount and type of additives in the fuel requires expensive laboratory testing. So this type of quality testing is rarely done. Most gasoline refiners don't want to sell the public bad gas because they obviously want repeat customers. Even so, they also know that deposit formation is a gradual thing that occurs over time. So if they cut back on the additive package to save a few cents per gallon, nobody is the wiser -- and least not right away. The problem occurs when people buy the lowest priced LAC gas they can find every time they fill their tank. The low level of additives (or low quality additives) in the fuel will not be adequate to keep their engine clean, and sooner or later they'll start to experience driveability problems. Worse yet, if a bad batch of fuel leaves a refinery and ends up in people's vehicles, it can cause even more serious problems. There have been instances where too much residual sulfur in a bad batch of gasoline has caused a rash of fuel pump failures. Here are some resources: Gasoline quality Techron TOP TIER Detergent Gasoline jd
|
|
|
|
|
Replying to: jim_dandy (Aug 26, 2008 2:52 pm) My Equinox has about 24,000 miles and had been very reliable. |
|
|
Replying to: grosloup (Aug 25, 2008 9:51 am) What you will find out one day as alot of people did during the gas shortages in the 70's was that there cars ran the same just as cars do today and if they didn't you wouldn't see un branded gas stations, do you think Sams, Costco, WaWa's make there own gas, they buy from the big guys you buy gas from however you pay a higher stuborn rate.
|
|
|
Replying to: packer3 (Aug 28, 2008 5:01 pm)
|
|
|
Replying to: grosloup (Aug 29, 2008 9:17 am) |
|
|
|
|
Not sure if this is the right place for this question or not. But, does anyone know how to remove the roof rack cross bars on a 08? I just picked up my 08 and tried to remove them and can't figure out how. I can move them back and forth, but not remove. Thanks Chuck |
|
|
|
They are really hard to get off or on. Mine didn't come with cross bars so the dealer ordered them for me and gave me a print out from the service manual on how to install them. You have to pry off the rear plastic covers on the roof rails and the the bars will slide in or out it you release the lock pins on the bars by lifting up the plastic tabs on the bars.Prying off the covers can break push tabs on the covers real easy or scratch the paint on the top of the car.I'd leave the cross bars on if I were you unless you really have to take them off. Maybe the dealer will do it for you, but probably not for free.
|
|
You are here:
Forums
SUVs
Chevrolet Equinox
Chevrolet Equinox Maintenance and Repair
New? Join Now!
Forum Tools
Search Forums
Browse by Vehicle
2010 Chevrolet Equinox



Browse by Board
Browse by Topic