The reservoir for the hydraulic clutch ( which takes DOT 3 brake fluid ) is located
in the engine compartment , by the drivers side fender / power distribution box
on a 1998 Ford Ranger
clutch fluid. Small reservoir looking like the brake overflow reservoir only about 1/3 the size.
It's going to look like your power brake reservoir. It is the reservoir for your clutch slave cylinder.
Engine oil reservoir, differential, radiator, power steering reservoir, brake fluid reservoir, windshield washer fluid reservoir, transmission or clutch.
After looking and consulting with techs, I found the reservoir to be included with the brake system. You should see a separate, unpressurized hose coming off the side (right) that leads down to the master clutch cylinder. This was on a 2004 VW New Beetle convertible.
It should be located in the oil pan. On my ranger its on the drivers side.
The clutch does not use oil, it uses DOT3 brake fluid. The clutch cylinder gets its brake fluid from the brake cylinder and is directly below it. Add fluid to the master brake cyliinder reservoir.
located below the oil filter
The oil drain plug is located on the bottom side of the engine of a 2007 Ford Ranger. It is directly on the oil pan.
There is no hydraulic fluid in the transmission. However, there is hydraulic fluid in the clutch system. If the clutch fluid reservoir is empty it would cause clutch not to operate.
the oil plug is located under the motor on the oil pan
The oil pan on the bottom is the fluid reservoir.
I do not think that there is any difference. Petroleum engineers normally inject water into an oil reservoir to maintain the reservoir pressure (and hence the ability of the reservoir to pump oil to the surface). In the process and if the water injection wells are properly located, the injected water normally sweeps (pushes out) out more oil effectively flooding the reservoir and increasing the amount of oil that is recovered from the reservoir. This incremental oil will otherwise be left behind in the reservoir. Hence, in an oil reservoir where the natural aquifer is large and strong enough to maintain the reservoir pressure, water injection is unlikely to significantly increase the oil recovery from the reservoir.