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Ford Engines

Ford's engines are well known throughout the world, not only in Ford vehicles but in aftermarket, sports, and kit applications.

Car (Automobile) engines[]

4 Cylinder[]

6 Cylinder[]

Ford was late to offer a six-cylinder engine in their cars, only introducing a six in 1941 after the failure of the 1906 Model K. The company relied on its famous Flathead V8 for most models, only seriously producing six-cylinder engines in the 1960s. The company was also late with a V6 engine, introducing a compact British V6 in 1967 but waiting until the 1980s to move their products to rely on V6 engines. The company has relied on five major V6 families ever since, the Cologne/Taunus V6, Canadian Essex V6, Vulcan V6, Mondeo V6 and Cyclone V6. But three of these lines are scheduled to end production within this decade, leaving only the Mondeo and Cyclone as the company's midrange engines.

  • 1906–1907 Model K straight-6
  • 1941– Straight-6
    • 1941–1951 226 CID Flathead
    • 1948–1953 254 CID Flathead used in buses and two ton trucks
    • 1952–1964 OHV (215, 223, 262) primarily car usage.
Ford 144cid six cylinder

144 CID straight-6 in a 1964 Ford Falcon

  • 1951–1966 Zephyr 6 — (United Kingdom)
  • 1967–1988 British Essex V6 — 60° British V6 2.5/3.0 L
  • 1964–present Cologne/Taunus V6 — 1.8–4.0 L pushrod and SOHC V6
  • 1982–2008 Canadian Essex V6 — 90° V6, 3.8/3.9/4.2 L models
  • 1986–2007 Vulcan V6 — 60° pushrod V6 3.0 L, originally designed for the Taurus
  • 1989–1995 SHO V6 3.0/3.2 L DOHC V6
  • 1994–present Mondeo V6 aluminum 60° DOHC
    • 1994–2000 Duratec 25 — 2.5 L
    • 1996–present Duratec 30 — 3.0 L
    • 2000–present Jaguar AJ-V6 — 3.0 L
  • 2004–present AJD-V6 — 2.7 L Diesel
  • 2006–present SI6 — 3.0/3.2 L I6 designed by Volvo[citation needed]
  • 2006–present Cyclone V6 aluminum 60° DOHC
    • 2006–present Duratec 35 — 3.5 L
    • 2007–present Duratec 37 — 3.7 L
    • 2009–present EcoBoost — 3.5 L

8 Cylinder[]

Ford introduced the Flathead V8 in their affordable 1932 Model B, becoming a performance leader for decades. In the 1950s, Ford introduced a three-tier approach to engines, with small, mid-sized, and big block engines aimed at different markets. All of Ford's mainstream V8 engines were replaced by the overhead cam Modular family in the 1990s, however the company is expected to introduce a new larger family, the Boss/Hurricane, by the end of the decade.

  • 1920–1932 Lincoln 60 Degree Fork & Blade V8 — (357.8 & 384.8 cid)
  • 1932–1953 Flathead V8
  • 1940–1950 Ford GAA engine
  • 1952–1957 Lincoln Y-block — mid-sized (317/341/368), HD truck (279/302/317/332)
  • 1954–1964 Y-block V8small-block Ford/Mercury/Edsel (239/256/272/292/312)
  • 1958–1968 MEL V8big-block Mercury/Edsel/Lincoln (383/410/430/462)
  • 1958–1976 FE V8big-block
    • 1958–1971 Generation I (332/352/360/361/390)
    • 1962–1973 Generation II (406/410/427/428)
    • 1965–1968 Ford 427 side oiler
  • 1958–1981 Super Duty truck engine — big-block (401/477/534)
  • 1962–2000 Windsor V8small-block (221/255/260/289/289HP/302/351W/Boss 302)
  • 1968–1997 385 V8big-block (370/429/460/514)
  • 1970–1982 335/Cleveland V8 — mid-sized (351 Cleveland/400/351M/Boss 351)
  • 1983–present Ford/Navistar Diesel V8
    • 1983–1987 — 6.9 L IDI (indirect injection)
    • 1988–1993 — 7.3 L IDI
    • 1993–1994 — 7.3 L IDI with Turbo
    • 1994–2003.5 — 7.3 L DI (direct injection) "Power Stroke"
    • 2003.5–present — 6.0 L DI "Power Stroke" (Only E series vehicles currently)
    • 2008–present — 6.4 L DI "Power Stroke" (Only F series vehicles currently)
  • 1991–present Modular V8OHC 4.6/5.4 L V8
    • 1997–present Triton V8 — truck versions of the Ford Modular V8
  • 1996–present Jaguar AJ-V8 — small displacement DOHC V8 engine family also used by Lincoln LS and Ford Thunderbird
  • 1996–1999 SHO V8 — 3.4 L DOHC 60° V8 designed and produced with Yamaha Motor Corporation.[citation needed] The 3.4L was used in the taurus SHO V-8.
  • 2005–present Volvo V8 — 4.4 L DOHC 60° V8 produced by Yamaha Motor Company in Japan in connection with Volvo Skövde Engine plant Sweden.[citation needed]
  • Cosworth DFV — DOHC 3.0 liter racing engine
  • 2006–present AJD-V8 — DOHC 3.6 L twin-turbo Diesel
  • 2010– Ford 4.4 Turbo Diesel — DOHC 4.4 L twin-turbo Diesel
  • 2010– Boss/HurricaneOHC 6.2 L V8

10 Cylinder[]

  • 1997–present Modular V10 — SOHC 90° V10 truck engine

12 Cylinder[]

  • 1932–1942 Lincoln L-head V12 (382/414/448)
  • 1936–1948 Lincoln-Zephyr V12 (267/292/306)
  • 2000s Aston Martin V12

Tractor and industrial[]

List to add

  • Ford 217 engine
  • Ford 2703E engine

See also[]

References / sources[]

Initially from wikipedia article to build on with the Tractor, commercial and industrial range.

External links[]



Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at List of Ford engines. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


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