caseydog wrote:Another thing people often don't realize is how stations buy gasoline. You would think that at a Chevron station, you are buying Chevron gasoline. But, that may or may not be the case. In areas where Chevron does not have refining operations, they may buy gasoline from another refiner that does. And it can change during the year. Not all refineries can produce "summer gasoline" for urban areas, so a Refining and Marketing company may have to buy from another company during the summer months for stations in urban areas that do not meet EPA air quality standards.
So, if you are loyal to one brand of gasoline, you may or may not be actually buying their gasoline. Not to worry, because the API sets the standards that ALL gasoline must meet.
From what I've been told, they put their proprietary additives in the tankers while they are getting filled.
Lesbest wrote:The storage farm here in NE Ohio is filled by a refinery in NW Ohio with an underground pipeline. One pipe--all fuels, when they are finished with diesel they put in a plug of snot (techinical term) to keep the types seperate and send the next liquid after it. The snot (technical term) gets here it is put in its own storage tank and a truck picks it up-takes it back to the pumping station and it is reused again abd again.
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