Cheshire Cat
Landlord.
That doesn't make a good headline for our gutter press.
That doesn't make a good headline for our gutter press.
Frankly I don't know but some people are panicking so much they are putting the wrong fuel in the car.Are there any sites that tell you which are out of fuel?
On sunny Sundays it's become a habit for me and the missus to go for a blast on the ol' 1988 Yam 1200. Went to put some juice in yesterday but they were out of E5. Figuring I'd be wasting my time looking elsewhere I added a tenner's worth of E10 to top the tank off. I knew I'd soon get through it and be adding E5 again and reckoned no harm would be done. Well, half a mile down the road and the normally turbine-smooth motor just felt out of sorts and the rest of our 100-mile trip was plagued with an occasional misfire followed by surging acceleration. I recently overhauled the ignition system with new everything and that is 100% perfect. Beware the E10... it is poison. Gonna run the bike to near empty and use E5 only.
Frankly I don't know but some people are panicking so much they are putting the wrong fuel in the car.
Petrol station chaos worsened by motorists filling up with wrong fuel
The AA said it had attended 250 such incidents over the weekend compared with an average of 20-25 on an average day.
I always run my bike on super unleaded if I can, but if super unleaded is going to be mostly E10 in future, I can't see E5 super unleaded staying around for long, I'll have to go back to the bog-standard stuff.
What is the alternative to using E10 fuel?
The good news is that super unleaded is set to remain at the E5 standard for five more years after the introduction of E10, according to the PRA. And most E5 currently only actually contains 2-3 per cent ethanol anyway.
The bad news is that it costs more – typically 15 pence per litre. So each time you fill up it could cost you an extra £6-10.
Probably the panicking partI don't get why panic buying would suddenly make people use the wrong fuel.
Probably the panicking part
Which will only lead to more queues as it takes nearly as long to put that amount in as a full tank and you'll need to go twice if you've a long journey ahead.At least until you find you can only put £30 in.
There is no shortage. One company - BP closed some stations because of driver shortage, the whole country went into melt down and thought it was the end of the world. Just checked and the tanks are full of red diesel, not shortages here@Chippy_Tea
You're saying that the hoarding of fuel actually created a shortage?
@Chippy_Tea
You're saying that the hoarding of fuel actually created a shortage?
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