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You can't and shouldn't repair this. Mercury being poisonous, it is best recommended to discard the whole thermometer, without letting the mercury escape, very carefully. Maybe where you live they have a special place where such objects are destroyed safely.
On a 3.0 v6, it is right on top of the engine, closer to the driver's side. and the ignition module is not "in" the distributor, it is attached to the side of it. It looks like a rectangle with a wire harness that connects to one end. fyi...removal of that module requires a special 5.5mm tool that is sold online under the name "ford ignition module tool" or something like that. You ***cannot*** remove the module without that tool!!! gotta love how they make it hard for normal folks to repair their own cars!!!!
Without a third party, they are always aligned.
Unless the connectors screw together, this is not possible without special equipment.
Both the 3.8 and the 4.6 liter engines used a coil pack from 1994 onward, meaning there is no traditional coil/distributor setup. There are three or four coils in one unit that are individually controlled by the computer and are directly connected to the spark plugs without a mechanical distributor.
Yes, one can see Mercury even without a telescope.
It is built into the distributor and is not available without buying a distributor.
Mercury and Venus.
Pick up coil?
Unplug the sensor and unscrew it from the exhaust pipe. You'll probably need a special socket to do it without damaging the wires.
Mercury can be seen with or without a telescope, depending on the conditions.
neon lights and signs wouldn't work without Mercury ''the element''. neon lights and signs wouldn't work without Mercury ''the element''.