on a 5.4 it's easy, one bolt and one plug-in .... your done (remember, there are 8 of them). The 97 4.6 is a different story on a 5.4 it's easy, one bolt and one plug-in .... your done (remember, there are 8 of them). The 97 4.6 is a different story
For a 1997 Ford F-150 , 4.6 liter V8 engine( It has 2 coil packs with 4 spark plug wires connecting to each coil pack )
You have to pull the dashboard to get to it.
Coil pack firing order 97 ford f-150 4.6 liter
It's rare a coil pack will go out but it does happen occasionally.
coil packs are the actual plugs on top of the plug
The coil for that cylinder is probably bad. replace it. If you have a coil pack, they run around 60 dollars and are easy to replace. I recommend replacing the sparkplug wires also when replacing the coil pack I have had a bad coil pack fry my wires. Go with motorcraft spark plugs also. The engine was designed for them and some of the other plugs run too hot
For the 4.2 L - V6 engine coil----3---4 pack---2---6 plug----1---5
On a 2002 Ford F-150 , 4.2 liter V6 engine : The coil pack towers are numbered : Coil-----3 - 4 Pack----2 - 6 Plug----1 - 5 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The engine cylinder locations are numbered : firewall 3 - 6 2 - 5 1 - 4 front of vehicle
The coil packs on the 4.6L are located in front of the engine. Follow the spark plug wires.
On a 1997 Ford F-150 , 4.2 liter V6 engine : The firing order is ( 1 - 4 - 2 - 5 - 3 - 6 ) ------------------------------------------------------------------ Also the engine cylinder locations are numbered : firewall 3 - 6 2 - 5 1 - 4 front of vehicle --------------------------------------------------------------- The towers on the coil pack are numbered : coil-----3 - 4 pack----2 - 6 plug-----1 - 5
autozone.com shows for a 1997 F-150 truck ( 4.6 L V8 engine ) COIL PACK NUMBERING : ( 6 - 3 )-----( 7 - 2 ) ( 1 - 5 )-----( 4 - 8 ) ---front of engine---
Hi, There is no more coil pack as what you are probably used to see. On the 2006 F-150 it is call "coil on plug" (COP), it's one coil per cylinder and it includes the boot that does directly on the spark plugs. Check to found out where you would normally check to find the spark plugs and you are gonna find the coil on plug. There is a 2 wires connector on it and a 7mm bolt that holds it to the valve cover.