Years ago on the air force base, the motorpool only supplied 1 grade of gasoline and, by the smell, I could tell it was premium. Do they know something we don't? No, people are trained to be cheap to themselves and all their stuff. Premium in all my stuff for the last 20 years and never needed any injector cleaner and, as you state, 5+ more miles per gallon, even on my old 1995 K1500 with 376,000 on the engine and counting.
Your comment about people being cheap, and being cheap to themselves, it’s so true. They think they’re saving money, but in the long run, they’re not. But it’s the fact that the psyop has been running for so long, we think it’s OK to buy $10 shirts at Walmart and expect them the last.
When my father passed away, I had some extra money, I went out, and I spent money on clothing. Good clothing, stuff that would last. I’ll never have to buy another pair of jeans for the rest of my life, and that includes every other garment you can imagine.
I may want to buy a few things here and there, however, I will not need to. The clothing I purchased is top-notch. And I don’t mean designer, top-notch, I just mean quality top-notch.
The increased price spread took a long time to catch up to the inflation rate but is still feasible in the benefit of lower overall operating cost including maintenance, payments, insurance and heavy repairs.
Years ago on the air force base, the motorpool only supplied 1 grade of gasoline and, by the smell, I could tell it was premium. Do they know something we don't? No, people are trained to be cheap to themselves and all their stuff. Premium in all my stuff for the last 20 years and never needed any injector cleaner and, as you state, 5+ more miles per gallon, even on my old 1995 K1500 with 376,000 on the engine and counting.
Your comment about people being cheap, and being cheap to themselves, it’s so true. They think they’re saving money, but in the long run, they’re not. But it’s the fact that the psyop has been running for so long, we think it’s OK to buy $10 shirts at Walmart and expect them the last.
When my father passed away, I had some extra money, I went out, and I spent money on clothing. Good clothing, stuff that would last. I’ll never have to buy another pair of jeans for the rest of my life, and that includes every other garment you can imagine.
I may want to buy a few things here and there, however, I will not need to. The clothing I purchased is top-notch. And I don’t mean designer, top-notch, I just mean quality top-notch.
It used to be though that premium was only $0.20/gal more than regular, then post-Obama it's about $0.80/gal more for no damn reason.
The increased price spread took a long time to catch up to the inflation rate but is still feasible in the benefit of lower overall operating cost including maintenance, payments, insurance and heavy repairs.
This is so true, but I’m finding that gas at Costco is cheaper. By a lot. So I go and deal with the lines that I hate so much.