Herson
Well-Known Member
Very interesting that your 3.6 JK is faster than your 2.0 JL.I don't have an answer but a small history lesson:
Originally the 2.0 demanded premium per the manual which was a huge turn off at 80 cents extra per gallon for an engine that was supposed to be more efficient, they also came mostly with the now defunct 2.0 E-Torque system which was a really fancy start/stop ploy which actually did start the Jeep instantly with the engine off and may have actually (at a price you could never get back through fuel savings) saved a very tiny bit more gas than the regular start/stop ploy.
Obvious complaints about somehow costing more to drive a more fuel efficient Jeep had Jeep change the print to tell us we could use 87 octane, I can't find anything showing they actually changed the engine itself though. The numbers for fuel cost dropped and folks like me questioned this but were less skeptical of buying the 2.0 which suddenly actually showed for the first time that you would indeed spend less for fuel than the less efficient 3.6.
Who's statements are correct in this thread ? - probably all of them as hard to believe as that is.
Economy does not seem to change with octane on this engine but actual performance may.
We need some hero to do quarter miles on each octane to show us but as far as I'm concerned my 2021 2.0 is slower than my 2015 3.6 and I run 87 octane but that may be why
If I were hauling a heavy trailer I would definitely use 93 octane as my Ram Hemi clearly showed me while trailering my '10 JK for sale that 87 was anemically weak and thirsty and then 93 suddenly fixed all and the legendary Hemi was back trailering my Jeep and passing slow-pokes at the same time, and yet, without that trailer there is no difference on that truck.
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