Here's an important issue that many might not be aware of. We are looking at all "gas" in the USA to be "the same", which it is not. Sure, it goes intot the tank and the car runs well, but the chemistry which makes that happen varies between EPA Ozone Non-Attainment areas of the nation. According to the last Exxon/Mobil map of which areas needed to have which blend of fuel, there were about 15 different blends of fuels. Each with their own tweaks to make them "legal" to sell in particular areas.
There are broad expanses of the USA where "normal", un-doctored fuel can be sold, away from metro areas. BUT that does not mean the fuels sold out there are not E10! To further complicate things, the pump labelling state legislation so the consumer knows what they are buying (ethanol concentrations) are NOT consistent, so an un-labeled pump can be dispensing ethanol'd fuels.
Just as there is
www.gasbuddy.com to see where the lowest gas prices are in your area, there also is a website to discover many things about gasoline. Seems like it is
www.fuel-kits.com ? Includes a list of fuel additives which also contain alcohol too. Many are near larger lakes where fuels need to be without ethanol as ethanol absorbs moisture. One of the first places that ethanol in fuel was "discovered" was in boats which had fiberglass fuel tanks.
To my knowledge, if E10 is sold in 87 Pump Octane fuel, then E10 would also be sold in Premium 91-94 Pump Octane fuels, as a general rule. This might be a regional/state "thing" that certain brands would have 87 Pump Octane be E10 and 93 Pump Octane be E0, but I somewhat doubt that. Several years ago, there were some private-brand fuels which were exclusively E0, from the least expensive octane level to the top octane level. I'm not sure if they are still that way or not. Plus, the states these stations were in had NO ethanol labeling standards!
End result, "gas" is not nearly as universal as it used to be, when the air was cleaner and sex was dirtier, so to speak. It might all work the same modern EFI cars, and even in our older carb'd cars, but some better than others.
How fuel is blended now is different from 50 years ago. Back then, if it was one of the main brands, it was BLENDED to be what it was in THEIR refineries, then delivered to a local agent, stored in those tanks, and then delivered to the local stations in a truck with the fuel logos on it. Now, the distribution model is more like the refineries blend a "universal" unleaded fuel, pipe it to distribution terminals. When the tank truck pulls up to the terminal, the terminal operator then punches buttons to get the correct BRAND's "additive package" and octane level added to that fuel to make it a "name brand fuel" for the particular brand. "Splash blended" rather than "full-refinery blended" fuels. The local agents have vanished, too.
Perhaps this might help explain why such varied experiences with "aged fuel" can result?
Enjoy!
CBODY67