I tried a full tank of unleaded fuel, no ethanol as an experiment.
I usually run 91 octane with 10% ethanol, just because it's so common.
Unleaded:
I instantly noticed it had a harder time idling,
easily 1/3rd the torque from idle to about 1500 rpm is gone
which corresponds with detonation happening more easily under load
afterwards its torque is about the same to 2000 rpm
from 2000+rpm there is a dramatic increase in torque, but with a slight dip between there and 4000rpm
keeps pulling like a freight train past 4000rpm
You can hear the engine is noticeably smoother beyond 3000rpm
it's like it fires so much better
yet below 2000 rpm it sounds like it might stall, motor hiccups occaisionally
Torque curve feels like an upside-down W
91 Octane + 10% Ethanol:
Resists detonation better below 2000-2500rpm
torque curve is relatively flat after 1500rpm, but slowly drops after 2500-3500rpm?
I cross a bridge at 80 km/h everyday on a steep slope, crossing the Hunter River.
My estimate is it's 100 metres tall and takes 15-20 seconds to reach the top driving at the speed limit.
With 10% ethanol fuel in 4th gear and WOT I always maintain my speed or even lose 1-5 km/h, wind-depending.
With pure unleaded fuel, I never lose speed in the same conditions and could actually gain 3-6 km/h before I reach the top if I wanted
I've also tried going 80 km/h in 5th gear using pure-unleaded and it still seems a bit more powerful up this bridge.

Fuel economy is about the same when I'm not using air-conditioning.
I suspect I'd get better economy on pure unleaded with air-conditioning since there's better "pick up" at cruise speed.
Fuel economy with 95 and 98 octane is actually progressively worse than 91 + E10, respectively.
91 + E10 for some reason gives me the best bottom end torque.
Pure unleaded however seems to have the worst bottom end torque compared with even 95 and 98 octane.
**Which one sounds better? There's only 2 cents a Litre more for pure unleaded.
Thanks
