actually you mean ethanol. Ethylene is an ingredient in anti-freeze. Unless the vehicle is specially equipped to be a flex-fuel vehicle, the answer is no. There is no cost benefit to running ethanol anyway. Ethanol is cheaper to buy, but gets significantly less miles per gallon, so you are burning more fuel when you run it.
A 1998 Ford Windstar would use refrigerant 134a
According to one of Fords websites : For a 1998 Ford Windstar ( 3.0 and 3.8 ) The ( Motorcraft FL-400-S ) engine oil filter is used
According to the 1998 Ford Windstar Owner Guide : With engine oil filter change : ( 4.5 quarts of engine oil ) for both the 3.0 liter and the 3.8 liter engines
On a 1998 Ford Windstar , the 3.8 ( and 3.0 ) have the Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ( EDIS ) so there is no distributor * they use ( 1 ) coil pack that has ( 6 towers ) where the spark plug wires connect
R134
In a 2000 Ford Windstar : ( DOT 3 brake fluid meeting Ford specification ESA-M6C25-A ) according to the Owner Guide
According to the 2003 Ford Windstar Owner Guide : ( No ) use " regular " unleaded gasoline , 87 octane
R-134A
According to the 2000 Ford Windstar Owner Guide : The 3.0 and 3.8 liter V6 engines use : ( " regular " unleaded gasoline , 87 octane )
The 1996 Ford Windstar takes 24" drivers side, 20" passenger side and 16" rear replacement windshield wiper blades.
It depends on what Taurus you have, the 1990-1995 Ford Taurus' use the AXOD and the AXOD-E transmissions. The 1996-2003 Ford Taurus' use the AX4S and some models even use the AX4SN transmissions. I have looked at some info on the Ford Windstar and they sould work, some Windstars use the same transmissions as the Ford Taurus, I think they use the same transmissions as the Taurus from 1993-2000.
All vehicles since 1994 use r-134. A