Ford Essex V6 (Canadian) | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Ford Motor Company |
Production | 1981–2007 |
Layout | |
Configuration | 90° V6 |
Displacement |
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Cylinder bore | 96.8 mm (3.81 in)[1] |
Piston stroke |
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Cylinder block material | Cast iron |
Cylinder head material | Aluminum |
Valvetrain | 2 overhead valves per cylinder, pushrods, rocker arms. |
Compression ratio |
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Combustion | |
Supercharger | Eaton M90 Roots-type (in 1989–1995 Thunderbird SC and 1989–90 Cougar XR-7) |
Fuel system | |
Fuel type | Gasoline |
Oil system | Wet sump |
Cooling system | Liquid-cooled |
Chronology | |
Successor | Ford Cyclone engine |
The Essex V6 is a 90° V6 engine family built by the Ford Motor Company at the Essex Engine Plant in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. This engine is unrelated to Ford's British Essex V6. Introduced in 1982, versions of the Essex V6 engine family were used in subcompact through to large cars, vans, minivans, and some pickup trucks. The Essex V6 was last used in the 2008 regular-cab F-150, after which it was succeeded by a version of the Ford Cyclone engine. An industrial version of the engine was available until 2015.