No, electronic ignition uses a sensor in the engine shaft that determines the pulses. This omits the distributor in exchange for electrical control.
A wiring diagram for a Ford Festiva's electronic ignition distributor typically includes connections for the ignition coil, power supply, and ground. The ignition coil is connected to the positive terminal of the battery, while the negative terminal connects to the distributor. The distributor sends the spark signal to the ignition coil via a wire, and the ignition module or control unit regulates the timing. For specific wiring details, consult a repair manual or wiring diagram specific to the model year of your Festiva.
No distributor The 4.6 liter is EDIS ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) and has ( 2 ) coil packs The 5.4 liter has the Coil On Plug ( C.O.P. ) ignition system with ( 8 ) individual coils
I don't think your car has a distributor cap. I believe it has an electronic ignition and only has an ignition coil to deliver spark to the plugs. Where this is located, I do not know.
A 1998 Ford Taurus uses the Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ( EDIS ) with a coil pack , so there is no distributor
you mean a coil pack, the service manuals at autozon etc , have good descriptions in them on how to OHM out a coil pack.
On the Ford Explorer that has the EDIS ignition system ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) instead of a distributor it has a coil pack with 6 coil pack towers for the V6 engine
Coil packs are analogous to the old distributor systems. Most modern cars do not use distributors anymore. Instead the ignition systems are completely electronic.
It doesn't have a distributor , there is a coil pack with the EDIS ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) coil---3---4 pack--2---6 plug---1---5 ( coil pack tower numbering )
You don't mention the engine size but it doesn't have a distributor It is either EDIS ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) or Coil On Plug ( C.O.P. ) ignition system
The ignition coil is inside the ignition distributor.
No , it's EDIS ( Electronic Distributorless Ignition System ) and has ( 2 ) coil packs