NEWS
3 1 JULY 2019 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 17
FIRE RISK SPARKS VOLVO RECALL
Volvo has recalled 507,000 cars globally, including 69,616 in
the UK, over concerns that a faulty engine component could
cause a fire. The issue affects cars built between 2014 and 2019
and using the firm’s four-cylinder 2.0-litre diesel engine. The
Swedish firm is in the process of contacting affected owners.
BMW X5 is the epitomy
of the aspirational
premium large SUV
WHEN YOU PULL into your local fi lling
station, chances are there will be two types
of petrol on offer: the cheaper premium
grade and pricier super unleaded. So what’s
your poison? Go for the super just because
it sounds like a good idea, or be thrifty and
stick with the premium?
The most signifi cant difference between
the two is the research octane rating (RON)
of the petrol. The octane rating tells you
how resistant the fuel is to detonation,
known as knocking or pinking. In a petrol
engine, petrol is mixed with air, then it’s
compressed and ignited by a spark. When
that happens, the mixture burns outwards
from the point of ignition like a grassland
fi re (but faster). The burn should be
smooth and controlled, but if the mixture
is compressed too much, random pockets
of the mixture spontaneously detonate too
early. It’s audible and can make a sound like
dried lentils being poured into a tin can, or a
diesel-like knocking noise.
A key way of increasing a petrol engine’s
performance is by raising the compression
ratio, or in a turbocharged engine
increasing the boost – or both. Either one
increases pressure inside the combustion
chamber when the fuel ignites. In older
engines, the threshold at which detonation
became a threat had to be carefully
managed by engine designers and tuners,
e s p e c i a l l y w he n t u rb o s c a me a lon g. T he n
back in 1982, Saab’s engine genius, Per
Gillibrand (known as ‘Mr Turbo’), dreamed
up Automatic Performance Control. APC
listened for the onset of knock by using a
microphone attached to the cylinder block
- a knock sensor – and monitoring boost
pressure and engine revs.
Today petrol engines use similar anti-
knock systems, but thanks to much faster
processors in engine computers they can
also use algorithms to predict when knock
will occur. Naturally aspirated engines
delay the point at which combustion is
triggered (retarding the ignition) if knock
threatens, all of which brings us back to the
question of whether you need to fork out the
extra dosh for super unleaded. The answer
is, there’s only one real reason to and that
WORST CASE SCENARIO
is because your
car has a high-
performance
engine or the
handbook explicitly
says you should use
it. Using fuel of a higher
octane than your engine needs or can
benefi t from won’t hurt it, only your wallet.
The difference between premium and
super unleaded these days is a maximum
of two points (97 octane versus 99) and the
chance of a modern engine being damaged
by the lower of the two is nil. However, the
engineers calibrating higher-performance
engines and chasing the best performance
numbers are likely to have done so using the
highest-octane pump fuel available.
The higher octane allows the engine
to use a higher boost pressure and more
aggressive settings to pump out a little more
power. With the lower octane, it may back
off those settings a tad to stay below the
knock threshold. Whether you can notice
the difference subjectively, though, is down
to how attuned you are to your car.
Extreme cases of detonation can badly
damage an engine. This cylinder head from
a very highly tuned competition engine
looks like it has been nibbled by rats. Rest
easy, though, because there’s no chance of
anything like this happening to a production
car by choosing premium petrol over super
unleaded at your local garage.
PERPLEXED AT THE PUMPS?
OCTANE RATINGS EXPLAINED
Here, fuel
and air are
microseconds away
from being compressed and
ignited in a direct-injection
petrol engine. How much
it can be compressed
depends on the octane
rating of the fuel.
UNDER
THE SKIN
JESSE CROSSE
STARTING AT THE TOP
It is no surprise that the big
winner in recent years has
been the premium compact
crossover, as premium
brands originally started at
the top of the SUV tree.
For example, the first
BMW SUV was the X5 and the
Volvo’s first was the XC90,
with the companies then
working down to the X1 and
XC40 respectively. Buyers
on a budget of £30-40,
love the idea of an affordable
crossover with the kudos of
their big brothers.
Non-premium large
crossovers are the only SUV/
crossover segment to have
peaked – or gone ‘ex-growth’
in marketing jargon. There
is no precedent anywhere
in the market for a non-
premium segment to recover
share against premium
competition.
2016
Compact premium SUV (e.g. Volvo XC40) Medium premium
SUV (e.g. Volvo XC60) Large non-premium SUV (e.g. Ford Edge)
2017 2018 2019 Q
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CLASS WAR: HOW COMPACT SUV SALES STACK UP
5 4 3 2 1 0