WalterB wrote:Sorry, John, just
had to give your secret away.
..Once upon a time, in a land far far away in a prehistoric era, millions and millions of years ago, there lived the dinosaurs.....
they paid the most for our gas...... since they became extinct, became fossils, and then became crude oil in the glaciers, tar pits, seas, and deserts of the world.
They died for our sins.
This morning, the convenience store prices in my area are $3.61 to $3.65. Wal-Mart is at $3.52, $3.49 with your Wal-mart shopping card, which I use. So, $3.49 for me. For now. For this hour.
John, what is "Special" gas, and, do I want to know???

You mean I can bottle it and use it in my CAR???

I thought it was funny...about the dinosaurs....
Anyway, thanks Walt - for the words of encouragement.
Let me explain. What is "special" gas? Jokes aside. When a gasoline tanker truck pulls into a gas station in need of gasoline - it fills the drums and tanks under the station with either high test/premium; lets say 93 octane and regular unleaded gas; lets say 87 octane. However, there is also a siphoning mechanism in the individual pumps so that when the customer/patron selects it - a
special or mixed blend of gasoline comes out from both the high test/premium tanks and the regular unleaded tanks down below. Lets say at 89-91 octane (or numbers close to that effect). Most gas stations work this way, with
three choices - regular, special, and high test/premium. Be it from Exxon, Mobil, Amoco, BP, Gulf, Chevron, Texaco, Phillips, and Shell... However, Sunoco has it even broken down further into
five choices or groups, depending on the various octane selections chosen. Basically, all you're doing is getting a change in octane levels so that your car can perform better.
...And if you can't be with the one you love.., "Love the One You're With" -- Stephen Stills 1970