Abstract

The Octane Numbers Game

Mowbray, A. Q. | December 15, 1969 issue

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The men of the oil industry, whose recent public works include the slick along the Santa Barbara, California beaches, and whose plans for improving Alaska include a 48-inch pipe line 800 miles long from the north coast to the south, have also been laboring to prevent the United States Federal Trade Commission from making a fool of itself over a thing called the octane number of gasoline. To appreciate the scope of the oilmen's public service, one must first understand octane number. The American Society for Testing Materials, the authority in this field, names octane number as the most costly element in gasoline production.

See Also:

GASOLINE -- Anti-knock & anti-knock mixtures; PETROLEUM industry & trade -- United States; PUBLIC works -- United States; UNITED States. Federal Trade Commission; PETROLEUM products; TECHNOLOGY & state; UNITED States
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