Ideally, stock engine KX's really like about 98 non-ethanol, preferably leaded octane. Because of OEM crank-seal issues with the ethanol in all the street-use intended pump in our region (E10, even when we mixed it at 50/50 with leaded race gas still was an issue with the amount of mileage our bikes accumulate), we switched to straight 110 leaded/off-road use only Cam-2 (same as Sunoco Gt 110 leaded; do not purchase the 100 octane non-lead, in ethanol states it has it). In our immediate area (southern NJ), 110 leaded is readily available, consistent quality and reasonably priced. Jetting will have to be drastically leaned out (specific gravity of race fuel is quite a bit lighter/flows better then pump, especially over pump with water asorbing ethanol), but I recommend going a step at a time until correct (higher compression along with race fuel is easier to jet, my KX300bb for example was a piece of cake to jet and was almost spot-on with me just guessing, but I'm running some pretty high-compression). The benefits are huge! The leaner jetting means superb fuel economy compared to pump, consitent performance (ever get a bad tank of pump? ping-city!), an increase in performance once properly jetted, cleaner powervalves, etc. The only downside I've noticed on a stock-engine with race fuel off-road is when you have to lug it for a distance for transfer section (dirt roads, black top), race fuel is more prone to loading-up, but it clears out quickly and stays clear everywhere else when jetted correctly. I would never use pump swill ever again in any of my racebikes since switching, race fuel isn't a hoax and is worth the cost.