The battery it uses is ( BCI group size 58R ) and that seems to be 550 to 590 cold
cranking amps ( CCA ) depending on battery make
How many cold cranking amp do a 2001 ford ranger needs?
the cold cranking amp minimuim would be 550CCA
It came from the factory with a 650 cold cranking amp battery
The cold cranking amps that are required to start your Ford 2.5 liter engine is dependent upon the outside temperature. 450 cranking amps are required at a temperature of 32 degrees.
The specification calls for 650 cold cranking amps (CCA) - but with batteries: more is better.
It came from the factory with a ( 650 ) cold cranking amp battery , according to the Owner Guide
For a 1993 Ford Thunderbird , 5.0 liter / 302 cubic inch V8 : ( BCI group size 65 , 650 to 850 cold cranking amps )
From the factory , the battery was 650 cold cranking amps ( CCA ) ( BCI group 65 )
I have a 1995 Ford EXPLORER that also has the 4.0 litre , EFI , V6 engine and I have always used a Ford Motorcraft battery that is ( 650 cold cranking amps ) * it seems to be quite adequate
A 1993 Ford F-150 takes a ( BCI group size 65 battery ) One of Fords websites has batteries listed from ( 650 to 850 cold cranking amps ) for the gasoline engines
A 1994 Ford Probe (4 cyl or V6) requires a group 58R battery. One example is Interstate Batteries - part # MTP58R - which has 610 cold cranking amps. Various other brands are available, but most are identified by group number 58R ("R" indicates "reverse polarity" as compared to a plain "58".)
My 1995 Ford Explorer XLT with a 4.0 L - V6 engine came with (a 650 cold cranking amp battery )