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Are you sure its actually required on her Escape? This is another one of the engines where the power numbers Ford list under specs was achieved with 93 octane. The owners manual for the Escapes with the 1.5L Eco and 2.0L still states that 87 is the minimum and premium should be used for additional performance.
Ford has done a lot of work making sure their engines can run 87 as a minimum as a premium fuel requirement might deter people from getting an Ecoboost in their next Ford.
My wife currently drives an EB Escape and runs 87 all the time. No issues, if 91 is required, that is a surprise to me.
The Escape 2L Ecoboost has a 10-1 compression ratio.
Prolonged use of 87 is not going to be good in the long run.
...And if you can use E85, you can't in the Gen1.
You definitely sound sure of yourself, but what you are stating is not correct. To simply say prolonged use of 87 is not going to be good in the long run and just an ignorant remark. No matter the compression. Any fuel can be detrimental if the engine is not properly tuned for that octane level.
Not sure what you are talking about to the Gen1, but they can easily accept e85??
Higher octane fuel is no better for your engine than plain 'ole 87. Premium just detonates at higher compression, thus reduces knock on high compression / turbo engines. Premium also won't get you better mileage or less buildup on engine internals so long as the detergent levels are the same on both grades of fuel. Numerous tests have proven this.