No , in 1997 the 4.6 L in the F-150 came from the Romeo engine plant
( the 4.6 L in the 2004 F-150 could have come from the Romeo Engine Plant - " REP "
or the Ford Windsor plant - " Ford Windsor " )
There is a sticker on the valve/cam cover that shows either " REP " or " Ford Windsor"
The 4.6 L - " REP " uses the ( FL-820-S ) engine oil filter
The 4.6 L - " Ford Windsor " uses the ( FL-400-S ) engine oil filter
( I'm assuming that's what you are asking ? )
Try a search for vortec engines
The 4.2 liter V6 , 4.6 liter V8 , 5.4 liter V8
The development of Cummins engines and the establishment of the company has nothing to do with Ford. As for using their engines, yes, Ford has used Cummins engines, in some of their medium duty trucks (currently represented by the F650 and F750... the F450 and F550 are also medium duty, but the Cummins engines were never available for those... the heavy duty market, Ford gave up in 1997 and sold to Daimler A.G., who put the trucks into production under the Sterling name.
dose 1997 and 1999 of Toyota Camry has any difference
SMA Engines was created in 1997.
All Ford Expedition 1997 - 2000 are all the same. The only difference are the models Xlt and EB.
Woundnt work since there's a different bellhousing assembly , not to mention totally different engines. Eventhough same 1.8l but entirely different...
1997
Ford uses the Triton name for gasoline engines in some of their trucks I believe Ford started doing that with the 1997 model year ( 4.6L , 5.4L V8 engines ) ( 6.8 L V10 engine ) Are the sizes that immediately come to mind
The 1997 model was made one year after the 1996.
No difference if they are the same model (same hardware like engine and so on). There is a slight difference between Japan made and US ones.
Everything.