the information i have shows all 1999 models having a 2.0L I4
No. The front door on the sedan and the wagon is the same.
The front fenders on the wagon and the sedan are the same.
No , a 1999 Ford Expedition came from the factory with the 4.6 or 5.4 " regular " unleaded GASOLINE V8 engines ( * 87 octane )
The Ford Escorts temperature sensor is mounted in the following locations. In the 1.8L engines it is located in the cylinder head, 1.9L engines it is threaded in the heater hose inlet pipe, and in 2.0L engines, it is located at the rear of the engine.
No it is a second generation. The engine in the focus is based on the third generation of engines from 1997 to 2002 Escorts.
No. Only pre-1991 Escorts (generation 1) were interference engines. All escorts from 91 up are all non-interference engines. Gates says the the 2.0 SOHC engine is an interference engine. This is not right. Gates is wrong.
On a 1999 Ford Taurus , the " Vulcan " and " Duratec " 3.0 liter V6 engines are both fuel injected so there is no carburetor for the engines
The replacement number for a 1997 is 9007, I'm not sure what the number is on the 1999, but feel pretty sure it is the same.
The 1999 Ford Explorer owners manual shows ( 5 W - 30 ) all available engines The 1999 Ford Explorer owners manual shows ( 5 W - 30 ) all available engines
According to the Gates website ( they make timing belts etc. ) both the SOHC and DOHC engines in a 1999 Ford Escort ARE INTERFERENCE ENGINES
No , according to the Gates website ( they make timing belts etcetera ) the 2.0 liter ( SOHC and DOHC ) engines that are used in a 1999 Ford Escort are NOT INTERFERENCE ENGINES
According to the 1999 Ford Explorer Owner Guide : All engines came with the Motorcraft BXT-65-650 battery ( that's BCI group size 65 , 650 cold cranking amps )