Gaslighting
May. 16th, 2024 12:26 am I've read a lot of complaints from people in the US recently about the price of gas, which seems to be about $3/gallon. I've always been vague about the conversion to litres, not just from gallons but from AMERICAN gallons, which I have no clue about at all. But I just looked it up and did the conversion. A US gallon of gas at $3.60 is around 95 cents a litre.
I'm crying. Gas, or petrol as we call it in New Zealand, is around $3 a litre, or more than three times the cost in the US. Other than a very brief dip in 2016, petrol hasn't been under $1/litre since 2000.
I'm crying. Gas, or petrol as we call it in New Zealand, is around $3 a litre, or more than three times the cost in the US. Other than a very brief dip in 2016, petrol hasn't been under $1/litre since 2000.
no subject
Date: 2024-05-15 03:19 pm (UTC)I was THRILLED to find $4.99/gallon last week - every gas station in town other than Costco, is $5.45 or more!
But yeah - Canada, New Zealand, the UK - anywhere that uses litres, have been >$1/litre for ages and ages, and just pat Americans on the head when we whine :)
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Date: 2024-05-15 10:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-05-16 02:16 pm (UTC)In the winter they change the "mix" and the prices go down a TINY bit, and in the summer they change again, and the prices go up (more than they went down, tbh)
The difference involves the fuel’s Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP), which is a measure of how easily the fuel evaporates at a given temperature. Winter-blend gas has a higher RVP because the fuel must be able to evaporate at low temperatures for the engine to operate properly. Summer-blend gas has a lower RVP to prevent excessive evaporation when outside temperatures rise.