are the wires good? Plugs?
I'm not a mechanic / technician but I would say ( NO ) I was looking at one of the Ford websites and it shows different part numbers for the ignition coil on a 1995 Ford F-150 The 4.9 ( six cylinder ) takes the ( Motorcraft DG-434 ) ignition coil The 5.0 ( V8 ) takes the ( Motorcraft DG-470 )
# 2 coil / spark plug / engine cylinder is on the passenger side of the engine , 2nd from the front of the engine (coil on plug ignition )
Most all modern cars and trucks have computer modules which control ignition (and much more) instead of ignition coils and distributors. I doubt if a 2002 Ford F-150 has a coil. Correction: 02 F150 has individual coil over each spark plug for a total of either 6 or 8 depending on number of cylinders.
P0352 - Ignition Coil Primary B / secondary circuit malfunction
There is one on the top of each spark plug
On a 2000 Ford F-150 : The 4.6 liter V8 has the Coil On Plug ( C.O.P. ) ignition system with ( 8 ) individual coils firewall 4 - 8 3 - 7 2 - 6 1 - 5 front of Ford F-150
The 4.2 liter V6 engine in a Ford F-150 has the Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ( EDIS ) It has ( 1 ) coil pack that has ( 6 ) towers that take ( 6 ) spark plug wires It doesn't have the Coil On Plug ( C.O.P. ) ignition system
firewall 4 - 8 3 - 7 2 - 6 1 - 5 front of Ford F-150 ( V8 )
COP stands for coil on plug - each spark plug has its own ignition coil Since the 5.4 L - SOHC - V8 engine was first used in the Ford F-150 in 1997 , it has used the COP ignition system . The 4.6 L - SOHC - eventually used the same system
If your Ford F-150 is a 1996 model or older it has a distributor / distributor cap . 1997 and newer either have the EDIS ignition system ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) or the C.O.P. ( Coil On Plug ) ignition system depending on the engine size and year
Yes , the 4.6 liter V8 engine in a 2001 Ford F-150 also has the Coil On Plug ( C.O.P. )ignition system with ( 8 ) individual coils ( like the 5.4 has always had )