Rigged gas pumps | GTAMotorcycle.com

Rigged gas pumps

Roadghost

Well-known member
Anyone ever see this email message? Haven't tried this, but I think I will. I always thought gas pumps were checked and calibrated routinely. If I can go by this information, 1 in 10 is ripping me off.


If they are doing it in Ontario, there is a good chance they are doing it in the rest of Canada as well.
Cheating at the gas pumps Canada
When you put the gas nozzle into your tank and pull the trigger, listen ...
You will see the numbers adding up, but there is no sound of the gas going into your tank for about 3 seconds or about 15-20 cents worth. Strange!
Stop at 10 liters and check the price.
Read and you will understand ...
This is true, it happened to travelers three weeks ago somewhere in Ridge town on the way to Kingston.
The pump should have totaled @ $38.00 (and change).
When the receipt was printed, and she checked it was $47.00 (and change).
She got mad, went inside the store, asked for a calculator and let them do the math. They refunded her.
She told them that if they cheat, they had better make it right.
Normally, her husband would skip printing the receipt. Not her.

We saw on the news the other night that this is happening everywhere.

Brian pumped exactly one liter of gas, the price did not match the cost of one liter.
It was higher, he went inside and complained and got a refund.

There is also a number on each pump that you can call and complain.

This is a true story, so read it carefully.

I stopped at a gas station in Chatham, my truck's gas gauge was on 1/4 of a tank.
I use the regular grade, which was priced at $1.250 per liter.
When my tank is at this point, it takes somewhere around 45 liters to fill it up.
When the pump showed 45 liters had been pumped, I began to slow it down.
Then, to my surprise, it went to 50, then 55.
I even looked under my truck to see if it was being spilled. It was not.
Then it showed 60 liters on the pump. It stopped at 62 liters.
This was very strange to me, since my truck has only a 65 liter tank.
I went on my way a little confused, then on the evening news I heard a report that 1 out of 10 gas stations had calibrated their pumps to show more gas had been pumped than a person actually got.

Here is how to check a pump to see if you are getting the right amount:

Whichever grade you are using, put EXACTLY 10 LITERS in your tank, then look at the dollar amount.
If the dollar amount is not EXACTLY 10 times the price of the fuel you have chosen, then the pumps are rigged.

In my case, as I said, the mid-grade was $1.250 per liter; my dollar amount for 10 liters should have been $12.50.

I wish I had checked the pump. It doesn't matter where you pump gas, please check the 10 liter price.
If you do find a station that is cheating, contact the MTO, and direct your comments to the Commissioner, the info is on the gas pumps.

Please don't delete this until you have sent it to all people in your address book.
We need to put a stop to this outrageous cheating of customers.
The gas companies are making enough profits at honest rates.
 
I guess the best way to figure this out is to pump into a (hopefully accurate) container and then see what the Pump says.

I am more curious about what happens when you try and pump premium fuel when the person before you pumped regular. Is everything that's already in the hose regular fuel and not premium?

How much fuel will you get that's regular before you get premium?

EDIT: Nevermind. I looked it up. Someone asked Shell about it:
Hello

On the use of a single hose to dispense multiple grades of fuel - Shell standards for these multiple grade single hose pumps are for a smaller diameter hose to reduce the amount of fuel left over from a previous dispense. The fuel grade change point is directly above the hose connection resulting in a residual volume of 0.56 liters for small diameter hose, or 0.78 liters if the pump happens to be equipped with a non-standard large diameter hose. While this amount will have only a very small effect on a typical car fill up, the effect is larger on 2 cycle equipment or a motorcycle tank with limited capacity.
 
Standards Canada (or another letter agency) checks pumps every few years or so. Fwiw, I have spreadsheets of all of the tanks of fuel I have ever put in my cars and the math works 100% of the time (I enter dollars and litres and spreadsheet calculates price/litre, I check vs receipt to make sure I didn't fat finger the entry).

If there is cheating going on, I would suspect it would be more along the lines of pumping 0.9 litres but saying one litre on the display. Unless you are pumping into a calibrated vessel that was empty to start, people would have great difficulty catching that. All approved gas containers have vapour space at the top so if you put 59 litres into a 55 litre tank, you are not surprised.
 
I dunno, I just checked Snopes. Seems it has been going around for awhile with an American and Canadian version. Snopes calls it 1/2 true. Still, it wouldn't hurt to check next time you get fuel for the lawn mower/snow blower.
 
Most pumps should have a Measurements Canada inspection sticker on them with test date and expiry date. Doesn't guarantee they can't mess with it after but still a bad sign if expired.

There's an Esso at Bloomington and 48 that always has cheap gas but has had theirs expired for 3 years last I went. Their esso tag/tap have also not been working for just as long. Complained to Esso corporate and all I got was that: 'we've told the message to the owner, please let us know if this continues.'
A year later it was still the same. pumps probably run low and they allure people with cheap gas prices.

I've learned to use gas buddy to find cheaper gas. Use premium so you can't go by the displayed price.
 
I used to pass one of the cheapest places to buy gas in London on my way to work. It's a Pioneer. Every morning I would check the price and then on the way home. EVERY DAY the gas would be 3-4 cheaper on my way home than it was in the morning.

But here's the real kicker. Pioneer is self serve and the indepeneant full serve (Ron Kraft) across the street was always only 0.1 cent more a liter. The Pioneer lot would have people waiting for pumps while the full serve across the street was empty. people are funny.
 
I used to pass one of the cheapest places to buy gas in London on my way to work. It's a Pioneer. Every morning I would check the price and then on the way home. EVERY DAY the gas would be 3-4 cheaper on my way home than it was in the morning.

But here's the real kicker. Pioneer is self serve and the indepeneant full serve (Ron Kraft) across the street was always only 0.1 cent more a liter. The Pioneer lot would have people waiting for pumps while the full serve across the street was empty. people are funny.
Pioneer got pinched decades ago for having too much water in their underground tanks.
I've never gone back.
 
Pioneer got pinched decades ago for having too much water in their underground tanks.
I've never gone back.
News to me. Never had a problem. But like I said I would often pony up the nickel and let Ron's eager staff pump it. They even ask to clean the windows!
 
There was a thread on here a few years back about this same subject.

I think one member was saying his family or friends or something like that used to own a gas station and rigging the pumps was very easy to do from inside the store
 
I buy my gas from the same station for all of my fill ups. My digital truck usage display used to be right on the money and now it is off by a couple of liters every time. I have been meaning to go to gas station across the street to see if the same thing happens.

As for premium, when I bring a jerry can I always pump a few liters of fuel into the truck first so I get all premium in jerry can. On the bike I wait until need a full tank before fueling to negate the regular/premium loss.
 
I'm curious about the greater negative effect on motorcycles as mentioned earlier. What could happen with such a small amount?
My fuel gauge is somewhat pessimistic. if I refuel when the light starts flashing it'll take about 12 litres, meaning there is still 5 in the tank.
My ecu is flashed for premium so that's what I use, can 0.5L of regular mixed in cause an issue? I can't imagine such a small amount would make much difference. Even at a full tank that's only 3% of the volume.
 
"volume corrected to 15 degrees C."

IIRC measuring the fuel you purchase solely by volume is sure to show anomalies.

Isn't it really about the amount of energy contained within a given volume of gasoline..??

I am not a scientist or chemist.... If that's not already apparent.
 
I'm curious about the greater negative effect on motorcycles as mentioned earlier. What could happen with such a small amount?
My fuel gauge is somewhat pessimistic. if I refuel when the light starts flashing it'll take about 12 litres, meaning there is still 5 in the tank.
My ecu is flashed for premium so that's what I use, can 0.5L of regular mixed in cause an issue? I can't imagine such a small amount would make much difference. Even at a full tank that's only 3% of the volume.
I wouldnt be too concerned. Very few tunes will be right at the bleeding edge as you cant trust the fuel at the best of times.
 
There was a thread on here a few years back about this same subject.

I think one member was saying his family or friends or something like that used to own a gas station and rigging the pumps was very easy to do from inside the store

^--- This. Or use a pump right after a car that uses premium is finished.
 
In the city I doubt you need to worry, especially at the big name suppliers.

Out in the sticks, who knows. Back home, in the sticks, there is an Econo gas station that looks like a dump and the proprietor looks a bit sketchy. One time I was there filling with premium (the pump had a ratchet strap around it to, I assume, keep the panels from falling off) and there was a guy at the other pumps on the other end of the island filling with regular. His nozzle shut off when his tank was full, and at that instant my hose jumped. How do you explain THAT?
 
I wouldnt be too concerned. Very few tunes will be right at the bleeding edge as you cant trust the fuel at the best of times.

I don't want to be running the ethanol through my motor. It is on the bleeding edge, though. Premium just cuts it.
 

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