interesting. not doubting you, but could CAP verify this?
i was just thinking more about this as i was cleaning up.
higher octane has a higher resistance to detonation, and pre-ignition.
detonation is generally when there is excessive heat inside the combustion chamber, which causes pressures to be too high, which ignites the fuel mixture somewhere other than at the spark plug, and often times before the plug fires.
when this happens, you now have 2 flame fronts traveling at each other. when they meet, that's when you get detonation....and it can be pretty dam damaging to an engine.
pre-ignition is generally when a spot in the chamber gets too hot, and ignites the a/f mixture before the plug does. this can/will actually cause detonation(when the flame fronts meet)
with todays computer controls, this isn't very common any more. the worst thing to watch for, is pre-ignition, as using crappy gas, can and will leave carbon deposits in the chamber, and that is where you get hot spots from.
racing engines are totally different.
i need to think more to remember octane ratings meanings......part of it is the resistance to combustion, and detonation.......
EDIT.....
detonation is VERY VERY bad. i've seen drag race engines turn into hand grenades from detonation.