According to the 1998 Lincoln Navigator Owner Guide :
It came from the factory with a 50 / 50 mix of distilled water and GREEN
color antifreeze ( meeting Ford specification ESE-M97B44-A )
The engine cooling system capacity is 20.8 U.S. quarts , so you would need :
( 10.4 quarts / 2.6 gallons of antifreeze ) for a 50 / 50 mix
* Ford states not to exceed 60 % antifreeze
They should just pull straight out.
No, any antifreeze/coolant will do.
I was looking at various Owner Guides for a 2000 Lincoln : ( Continental , LS , Town Car , Navigator ) They all show ( Motorcraft MERCON automatic transmission fluid is used as the power steering fluid )
It require the G12 antifreeze.
You can use any standard antifreeze, there is no special type required.
No. Just goto a shop have the coolant (antifreeze) changed every 2 years. Have it "REVERSE FLUSHED" and have the thermostat replaced at the same time (should only cost 80 bucks or so) A shop will know which stuff to put in. You will not be able to flush the system like a shop can. Its worth the money.
It's supposed to use the orange Dex-Cool antifreeze common to GM vehicles.
No
No, but you do need the full 50-50 mixture of antifreeze and water to get the maximum cooling and freeze protection.
i just had mine changed it is underneath the truck on the exhaust on the passenger side,you need a special tool to remove the sensor hope that helps(it's a plug looking thing
The Special Olympics is held around the University of Nebraska Lincoln and the Lincoln community.
Not antifreeze, that is special oil for the ac compressor with some dye in it to help trace refrigerant leaks.