firewall
4 - 8
3 - 7
2 - 6
1 - 5
front
Yes, that would be possible.
Jimmy Kimmel Live - 2003 2-54 was released on: USA: 24 October 2003
Check the owners manual or the oil fill cap, should be 5w20. For the 5.7L 8-cyl Engine Yes 5w20 For these 2 from what I find 5w30 3.7L 6-cyl Engine & 4.7L 8-cyl Engine
I'd assume that you have a 6 cyl. engine. if you have a 4 then i'd be suprised if it runs at all. if you have a 6 then no it will not run for verry long with the 2 dead cyl. with out those 2 cyl it is putting more stress on the crankshaft than what it was designed for. do you know why the 2 are "broken" there are several diff. things that can cause a cyl. not to fire. I you dont have to run it I wouldn't
standing at your front bumper looking at the engine. #3 cylinder is on PASS side, second cylinder from the fan towards the firewall. XXXXX FIREWALL XXXXX CYL 7 CYL 8 CYL 5 CYL 6 CYL 3 CYL 4 CYL 1 CYL 2 FAN FRONT BUMPER
it will depend on the miles on the engine. So in theory : NEW : 160 200,000 miles probably 130 to 145 range. mainly what you don't wnat to see is this sinerio: cyl #1 135 cyl #2 115 cyl #3 60 cyl #4 110 this would mean possible leaking head gasket, or if cyl #3 shows 0 then 2 bad valves on cyl #3.hope this helps.
depends on the engine if its a 4 cyl there are 2 6 cyl ther are 4. 1 on each cyl bank and before and after the cat converter
That sounds like a 4 cyl and if thats the case probably only 1 bank. Check engine firing order online. Bank 1 is no 1 cyl side if 2 sides.
passenger side of engine , 2nd cylinder from the front of the engine
left side of engine block{drivers side} are from front to rear. cyl's 1 3 5 7 right sie of engine {passenger side} are from front to rear. cyl's 2 4 6 8
The firing order of a 1973 Dodge Coronet with a 6 cyl (225) engine is 1-5-3-6-2-4 The firing order of a 1973 Dodge Coronet with an 8 cyl engine is 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2
On Left side of engine below the air inlet manifold in the area of #2 cyl.