I was looking at the 2002 Ford Thunderbird Owner Guide and it shows that the
vehicle is designed to run on " premium " unleaded gasoline , 91 octane or
higher , it doesn't show anything about E-85 ( so I would say no )
no
Maybe, if it is a 2.7L and there is a E85 sticker inside the gas door. If not no, it would damage the fuel system.
I don't believe so , 1999 was the first year that Ford Rangers offered the 3.0 L FFV engine option that allowed you to run E85 or regular unleaded 87 octane , or any combination of the 2 fuels
No ( according to the 1999 Ford Expedition Owner Guide your vehicle is designed to run on " regular " unleaded gasoline , 87 octane )
If you mean E85 then NO , but it can be converted to run on propane
No, it will damage the fuel system.
No. A 1999 Ram is not equipped to run on E85.
i am 99% sure it cannot. E85 can only be run on vehicles that are setup for it. i dont even know if they had E85 back in 02. the newer vehicles that cannot have a warning on the gas cap. but yours might not have that warning since it might not have been out yet
If you have the 3.0 liter FFV ( flexible fuel vehicle ) engine
I was looking in the 2002 Ford Explorer Sport Trac owners manual and IF you have the FFV engine ( flexible fuel vehicle ) you can run E85 or " regular " unleaded gas with an octane rating of 87 or any combination of the 2 fuels If your 2002 Sport Trac is a FFV there will be a sticker inside your fuel door , and the 8th " character " of your VIN will be a " K "
A2. Try this http://www.e85fuel.com/e85101/questions.php http://flexfuelus.com/ #8 v/u? A1. E15 is the highest you can run: there is a code in the VIN that will tell you if your vehicle can run E85.
It isn't designed to do that. Running E85 could damage the engine.