Saw on the news last night a petrol station in the North West (they didn't specifiy) flogging unleaded for £1.09.9 a litre!! Bit of a one off but who on earth would go there? There were people filling up when they were filming there..
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Station in West London 112.9p per litre for unleaded and people were using it! 80.9p in the Leeds area.
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Try AApetrolbusters.com you can search by post code for the cheapest fuel. you will need to register first though.
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Try AApetrolbusters.com you can search by post code for the cheapest fuel. you will need to register first though.
They give you a password, which (fortunately!) you can change. The one given to me was the name of an East European car manufacturer that used to make absolutely awful cars. The password made me shudder at the very thought of them!
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L'escargot by name, but not by nature.
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The one given to me was a prestigeous old british marque of the feline variety making sports cars and saloons.
I was well chuffed.
Sorry snail.
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Mine was a large feline so-called sports car made by Fford. Pity the prestigious British marque doesn't make estates - they'd look pretty impressive!
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The station selling petrol at 109.9p a litre is in the Blackpool area.
Actually there's little point in trying to find the cheapest petrol in your area - all the stations charge the same price and even if you did actually manage to find it a bit cheaper, it's going to cost more to drive there, fill up and drive back again.
Incidentally, a certain Telegraph journalist reviewing the papers on Sky TV the other night, laid into the Mail's front page lead story about petrol being about to reach £4 a gallon.
He scoffed at the story, said he had been told that petrol was actually "about £2.70 a gallon" at the moment and asked how anyone could work out the price by the gallon? To add further insult, the Mail gave the answer to his question in its first paragraph of the story.
The answer's simple, of course. A gallon is as near as makes little difference 4.5 litres, so multiplying the price per litre by 4.5 reveals that when it reaches a fraction over 88p a litre, then the £4 a gallon mark has been reached.
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