I didn’t notice till I got home, I was in a hurry. Then I got to thinking, hey that was a lot of money for 2.5 gallons. The guy from the state told me it is very difficult to change the pump to pump an inaccurate amount of fuel but all it takes is a few clicks on a key board to change the price per gallon at the pump. The station said that corporate sets the price remotely and was keyed in with the wrong price. But hey those people working in there ring up fuel all day long, they should have noticed that huge a price increase all the while their sign says $4.79 and the pump was charging $7.55.Oh. The price is displayed on the pump along with the amount dispensed. How did you not notice?
Can't say I've seen significantly lower prices at independent stations vs the chains, in fact they're likely as not to be slightly higher. Certainly nothing like what you mentioned...maybe 4 or 5¢/gallon, but at today's prices hardly worth going out of your way for.I do wonder how independents can underprice the majors and keep doors open?
The beautiful Shell station off the freeway is consistently 60 to 65 cents a gallon highe than both independents within 2 blocks which always requiring jockeying to fill up because non stop they are that busy where almost never a car at the flagship Shell.
I went to a station and got two 5 qt jugs of diesel which comes to 2.5 gallons. I paid and left but then realized I had paid way more than the sign said which was $4.79 per gallon. I paid $18.89 for 2.5 gallons. Divide 2.5 into $18.89 = $7.55 per gallon.
Well, what was the date, and what was the state?
Too bad The State put the $30K in their pocket and didn't, at least, give you what you were owed.It’s got nothing to do with the accuracy of amount of fuel being pumped but the price gouging that happened. The sign was $4.79 and the pump charged me $7.55. It was at a ConocoPhillips station in my town. The fella from the state said he made them print all the diesel tickets for the last 48 hours and some of them were $300 -$400.
It’s not worth it to me to go in that station and try to get my money back, what they owe me is only about $8 since I only got a small amount of fuel. I won’t go in there again, ever. But I feel for the ones who spent hundreds and probably still don’t know they got ripped off. But I was very impressed with the representative from Weights & Measures Dept. He followed up on my complaint quickly and spent time telling me what the station did wrong and what he did to stop it. Someone asked where this was, it was in Quitman AR.Too bad The State put the $30K in their pocket and didn't, at least, give you what you were owed.
Oh. The price is displayed on the pump along with the amount dispensed. How did you not notice?
I read an article years ago that most federal testing was done by pumping 5 gallons of fuel into a precisely marked container so some stations figured a way to make it pump the correct amount up to 5 gallons then it pumped slightly less each gallon afterwards.
You're much more likely to be a victim of card skimming than you are from tampered pumps.
I’ve been a skimmer victim. Credit card company caught it.
I’m usually too busy looking at the idiots at a gas pump that look like they never been to one before, and it takes them 20 minutes to figure it out.

My wife works for a financial institution and has shown me videos of skimmers, scammers, and ATM thieves. Pretty ingenious, if you think about it. You have to wonder how much better this world would be if these criminal masterminds put their skills to good instead of evil.I’ve been a skimmer victim. Credit card company caught it.
I’m usually too busy looking at the idiots at a gas pump that look like they never been to one before, and it takes them 20 minutes to figure it out.
Wow, incredible they would do that. But its true its set by satelite link, seen that at other stations, not sure how they change the display price.It’s got nothing to do with the accuracy of amount of fuel being pumped but the price gouging that happened. The sign was $4.79 and the pump charged me $7.55. It was at a ConocoPhillips station in my town. The fella from the state said he made them print all the diesel tickets for the last 48 hours and some of them were $300 -$400.
There was a place around here that had a similar setup. A couple years ago they replaced their pumps with traditional ones with built in card readers and all info displayed.Not all pumps have a price per gallon or even a total sale display on them. A company that is one of the largest bulk fuel and propane suppliers in the state has a large number of unattended card swipe stations in my state. I buy red diesel for my tractor at a pump at one of these stations. The pumps they use for these are all mechanical pumps with just a meter for volume dispensed. The price per gallon is only listed at the little card swipe kiosk where you swipe your card before going to the pump and pumping the fuel.