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How bad are you getting hit at the pump?

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 3, 2006 12:36 PM
$2.67/gallon at the neighborhood gas station.

$2.63/gallon at the local grocery store gas station.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 3, 2006 12:38 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by tatans

$1.09/litre (CDN) I think that's about $25.00/gal.


There are 3.67 liters to a gallon............
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Posted by chicagorails on Saturday, June 3, 2006 1:29 PM
here in clinton ia. today at murphy oil alas walmart 2.61
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 3, 2006 3:30 PM
I'd estimate US$3.80 per (American) gallon for the Canadian gas.

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 3, 2006 3:42 PM
Out here in Environmentally friendly VT...where cars are the spawn of the devil to all of the Birkenstock wearing, pot-smoking people from other states who moved here to 'stop everything, the scenery is beautiful'....

I apologize for my rant...

Anyways...

87--$2.83
93--(which my car takes[:(]) $3.05

Marc
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Posted by richardy on Sunday, June 4, 2006 2:13 AM
2.49 on Thursday, 2.59 on Friday and 2.57 on Saturday. Interesting here we have a warning system for a price increase. The Shell stations all go up one day before the others but they usually go up an extra ten cents then drop later. Wednesday evening Shell went to 2.69 then Thursday evening all the others go to 2.59 then on Friday the Shell stations dropped to 2.59. The other interesting thing is seeing three cars at the Shell pumping 2.69 gas when the Phillips 66 across the street is selling gas at 2.49.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 4, 2006 8:31 AM
Over the past week the price for 87 Octane has bounced around between $2.71 and $2.96 from station to station from hour to hour.

Andrew F.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 4, 2006 10:04 AM
Paid $2.55 for 87 octane in Lexington, S.C. yesterday. Passed the same station this morning and noticed the price jumped 14 cents overnight.
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Posted by jchnhtfd on Sunday, June 4, 2006 8:23 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by MPPOULIN

Out here in Environmentally friendly VT...where cars are the spawn of the devil to all of the Birkenstock wearing, pot-smoking people from other states who moved here to 'stop everything, the scenery is beautiful'....

I apologize for my rant...

Anyways...

87--$2.83
93--(which my car takes[:(]) $3.05

Marc


Marc! Glad to meet you -- you feel the same way about the birkenstock crowd I do! We're originally from West Brookfield, which hasn't been invaded yet...

I pay about $3.05, more or less, where I am in Connecticut (and you think you have problems, Marc!); my son, in Montreal, the equivalent of $4.00 US, more or less. And my daughter, in Edinburgh, UK, the equivalent of about $7.00 US.
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Posted by sschaer on Tuesday, June 6, 2006 1:52 AM
100 octane is $5.70
98 octane is $5.50
95 octane is $5.25

we have no fuel with less than 95 octane over here in switzerland
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Posted by cpbloom on Tuesday, June 6, 2006 3:56 AM
I haven't really been paying to the price so closely since I only get gas when the needle is on "empty". Don't get me wrong, I do fill up the tank.

Anyways regardless of the price, the last 3 times I filled up my Toyota Tercel in Columbus OH, it has cost me at least $23.00.... and I just filled up at a record (for me) $25.50! [:(!][:(!][:(!]

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Posted by Modelcar on Tuesday, June 6, 2006 10:47 AM
....Well the greedy ones decided they needed another raise of 27 cents yesterday in one shot. Gas prices are exceptionally high in many foreign countries but we also understand a great portion of that is tax for such provided services from the government.....that we don't have.
2.95 unleaded reg. Over 3.00 now for mid range and so on.....

Quentin

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Posted by trainboyH16-44 on Tuesday, June 6, 2006 11:29 AM
I'll never understand why they're so high here, but hey, at least we get it back. It's currently $1.08/L at my local gas station....

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Posted by Tharmeni on Monday, August 7, 2006 4:42 AM
Prices leaped over the weekend in Florida....it's now $3.04 a gallon for regular here in Bradenton.  At Sam's you can still get regular for $2.93.  BP's announcement of a shutdown of a large Alaska oil field for repairs will probably cause prices to go higher (even though most of the Alaska output goes to Japan).  I'll bet you they don't go back down after the field is back on line (after repairs). 
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Posted by eolafan on Monday, August 7, 2006 7:38 AM
As of Sunday morning at my local corner stations (one Mobil and the other Shell) we were paying $3.16 (Mobil) and $3.25 (Shell) [don't ask me, I don't know why either].  This morning we opened the newspaper to read about the pipeline in Alaska having corrision problems and the shutting down of 8% of U.S. crude production...so I am expecting a sudden and significant jump upwards in pricing this week.
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by tree68 on Monday, August 7, 2006 7:47 AM

 eolafan wrote:
As of Sunday morning at my local corner stations (one Mobil and the other Shell) we were paying $3.16 (Mobil) and $3.25 (Shell) [don't ask me, I don't know why either].  This morning we opened the newspaper to read about the pipeline in Alaska having corrision problems and the shutting down of 8% of U.S. crude production...so I am expecting a sudden and significant jump upwards in pricing this week.

Oddly, I've always read that the bulk of the oil from Alaska went elsewhere.

We're around $3.12 right now, but they've laid the groundwork, so I figure $4.00 by Labor Day.

LarryWhistling
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Posted by CNW 6000 on Monday, August 7, 2006 8:00 AM
 tree68 wrote:

 eolafan wrote:
This morning we opened the newspaper to read about the pipeline in Alaska having corrision problems and the shutting down of 8% of U.S. crude production...so I am expecting a sudden and significant jump upwards in pricing this week.

Oddly, I've always read that the bulk of the oil from Alaska went elsewhere.

These sound like great reasons for the oil companies to raise prices more for a largely ignorant public that keeps on paying.  I bike when ever/where ever possible.  We're paying ~ $3.13/gallon for 87 octane.  Premium is ~ $3.35/gallon.  It'd be nice to have "cheap" gas of ~ $2.50+/- again!  Black Eye [B)]

Dan

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Posted by vsmith on Monday, August 7, 2006 9:58 AM
The pipeline shutting down is very very bad news for the west coast, a big chunk of our gas comes from there. Its being closed indefinetly, Eh, big surprise, just drives profits even higher, so the long feared $4 gallon may soon be a reality. I'm ready for it....
 
I've been driving my new 35mpg Scion and enjoying it alot. I suspect I'll be seeing more cars like it in the future.
 
I still beleive the oil industry is playing us like a fiddle (ala Enron artifical shortages) only they're much smarter than Enron, and are keeping the stranglehold very subtle. But I really wonder about this...kinda like those powerplants that were shut down for "maintanence" right at peak demand.

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by Pathfinder on Monday, August 7, 2006 10:08 AM
 CNW 6000 wrote:
 tree68 wrote:

 eolafan wrote:
This morning we opened the newspaper to read about the pipeline in Alaska having corrision problems and the shutting down of 8% of U.S. crude production...so I am expecting a sudden and significant jump upwards in pricing this week.

Oddly, I've always read that the bulk of the oil from Alaska went elsewhere.

These sound like great reasons for the oil companies to raise prices more for a largely ignorant public that keeps on paying.  I bike when ever/where ever possible.  We're paying ~ $3.13/gallon for 87 octane.  Premium is ~ $3.35/gallon.  It'd be nice to have "cheap" gas of ~ $2.50+/- again!  Black Eye [B)]



The majority of the oil consumed in the US comes from Canada.  The mid-east and Alaska fill in what we can not provide.

Silly thing is our gas is more expensive than the US.  Currently at $1.169 (CDN) per liter here.
Keep on Trucking, By Train! Where I Live: BC Hobbies: Model Railroading (HO): CP in the 70's in BC and logging in BC
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Posted by jclass on Monday, August 7, 2006 10:22 AM

$3.12 here this morning.  But when will it matter?  Driving the interstate yesterday, I stuck to the 65mph limit to save some money yet not try to be an obstacle in traffic.  A steady stream of cars passed me at 70, 75, 80mph.  Will it ever sink in that our money spent to buy gas and oil from OPEC winds up in the hands of the fanatics who want us dead?

I always try to remember that when it comes to economics, the tail wags the dog.  Our oil will rise in price to reflect the going world-wide price.  We can't keep an artificially low price on the oil we produce for our use for very long without causing more problems for ourselves.  Look what happened to the railroads under ICC regulation.

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Posted by Modelcar on Monday, August 7, 2006 10:28 AM

....Just this morning I saw on the news of the pipeline mess in Alaska and alarm bells immediately went off...Upshot on prices.  Wife will be taking granddaughter back home to Indy today so I took 3.0L Lexus {lucky it does get good mileage}, over to station right away and "gave the oil Co.}, 40 dollars for 13 gal of 87 oct.

Price now was 3.06.  Early last week the Indy / Muncie area experienced a 50 cents per gal raise over night...From 2.69 to 3.19...!!  Since then we see it from 2.95 to what I paid this morning....

With the above news of the pipeline people in vast areas will be thinking like I did...go get it before they raise it on this mess.....and that itself will tend to raise it.  We can't seem to win on this issure.  They have us coming and going.

Quentin

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Posted by jeaton on Monday, August 7, 2006 10:32 AM

Based on my experience on a trip from home to Indianapolis last Friday, I would say that fuel prices have yet to deter anybody else from getting out of the Chicago area for the weekend.  Mid day northbound on I-94 was stop and go from downtown Chicago into Wisconsin.  We were going in the opposite direction at that point, but had to join the crunch of trafic heading east and south of Chicago.  I think I averaged no more than 55mph from Gary to Indy. 

In two weeks, we have to do it again.  I have reserved a small fortune to make this necessary trip.  With a little bit of luck everybody will be dead broke by that time and I will have an open road.

Seriously, my sympathy to those of you who must travel and have no option other than the car.

 

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Posted by SD60MAC9500 on Monday, August 7, 2006 11:51 AM
87 octane: $3.19 p/gal.
89 octane: $3.27 p/gal.
93 octane: $3.38 p/gal.
Rahhhhhhhhh!!!!
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Posted by rvos1979 on Monday, August 7, 2006 12:24 PM
I filled up with B5 Biodiesel in Cottage Grove on Saturday night, and still paid 3.19 a gallon.  Regular gas and E85 were at the same price, oddly enough.

Randy Vos

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Posted by selector on Monday, August 7, 2006 1:29 PM

Regular is CDN$1.15 on Vancouver Island, give or take a couple of cents here and there.  Oh, that's for a liter. I forget the conversion, but I think it is near 4.2l/USgal, so that puts us at well over $4.00/US gal.

We just unloaded a pickup and a 26' travel trailer for a new Corolla (45mpg).  I figured we should get the value out of them while the gettin' was good.  I wouln't be surprised to see gas reach CDN$1.40 or more before long...the way things are going in distant places.

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Posted by Jjohnieray on Monday, August 7, 2006 2:09 PM
Here at Appleton Wisconsin,lowest grade is at $ 3.12,a few at $3.15Black Eye [B)]
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Posted by SALfan on Monday, August 7, 2006 3:42 PM

 upchuck wrote:
I bought some in Chula for $3.17. Lower, but still too high. Angry [:(!]

On 8/5, regular was $3.029/gallon where I buy it in Nawthun Vuhjinya, and that's the cheapest price around - trust me, I've checked. 

Chula?  What state?

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Posted by blhanel on Monday, August 7, 2006 3:49 PM
 jeaton wrote:

Based on my experience on a trip from home to Indianapolis last Friday, I would say that fuel prices have yet to deter anybody else from getting out of the Chicago area for the weekend.  Mid day northbound on I-94 was stop and go from downtown Chicago into Wisconsin.  We were going in the opposite direction at that point, but had to join the crunch of trafic heading east and south of Chicago.  I think I averaged no more than 55mph from Gary to Indy. 

In two weeks, we have to do it again.  I have reserved a small fortune to make this necessary trip.  With a little bit of luck everybody will be dead broke by that time and I will have an open road.

Seriously, my sympathy to those of you who must travel and have no option other than the car.

Thank your lucky stars you don't have to do what I'm planning a few weeks from now- drive from Iowa to California and back, then drive from Iowa to Florida and back.

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Posted by spokyone on Monday, August 7, 2006 4:06 PM
In May I traveled to AZ NM CO NV and UT from IL in the old Dodge pickup. I spent $1,055 for gas. Now I drive girl friend's Toyota whenever possible. Price just jumped to 3.09 in Aledo IL
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Posted by doghouse on Monday, August 7, 2006 4:23 PM
350 yards from the Navajo refinery in Artesia, NM, gas is $2.949 a gallon.  Pipeline fees, I guess. 

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