They all do. You only have one bank with a straight six engine.
The ignition coil packs have the cylinder numbers listed on them. The cylinder closest to front of engine (where serpentine belt is) is cylinder #1, the odd cylinders are on this side of engine. Cylinders are in order from front of engine, ignition coil wires display their positions of which cylinder they belong to.
Yes, 3.5 is the size of the engine, i.e. 3.5ltr, V6 refers to the number of cylinders and how they are arranged, in this case 6 cylinders in a V formation, you can for example get a 3.5ltr engine in a straight 4 cylinder block, straight 6 or V6.
2 cylinders
The 4 cylinder engine has ( 4 cylinders ) and the V6 engine has ( 6 cylinders )
Cylinder 1 is closest to front of engine, by where serpentine belt is. The cylinders on the same side of engine as cylinder 1 is are the odd cylinders, opposite side are evenly numbered cylinders. The cylinder numbers go up in order as the distance away from front of engine.
There are ( 4 engine cylinders ) in a Ford Ranger 2.3 litre four cylinder engine
They have a straight six cylinder engine in them. Since the cylinders are all in a straight line (i.e. "Straight Six") the exhaust can by carried via the exhaust manifold through a (basically) straight pipe to the rear of the vehicle. With a V8 or V6 engine the cylinders are arranged in either two banks of 3 or 4 cylinders, one bank on each side of the engine, hence requiring and exhaust manifold and pipe on each side of the engine to route the exhaust gas to the rear of the vehicle.
Wheel cylinders are in the rear drum brake between the shoes. The Engine's cylinders are in the engine block, under the cylinder head.
The 2.0 liter 4 cylinder engine has ( 4 cylinders ) The 2.5 liter V6 engine has ( 6 cylinders )
There is NO relationship between number of cylinders and cc of an engine. It could be a 4, 6, or 8 cylinder engine in a car, - or even one cylinder in a medium sized marine engine.
1 cylinder at a time.
1