7.2 seconds
no, I own a 1994 Taurus gl with the 3.0 Vulcan and it is 10 to 60 and 16.90 at 77 in the 1/4
i don't think a Taurus could get quite that good of time without mods
no were near 7.2 say about 17.6secs
Near 13 sec. In Taurus 95 10k miles Vulcan 3.0 Axod-E station wagon Syrian gasoline 98 octan
I think its around 8 seconds
Like 9
a Ford 400 had a 4 inch bore and 4 inch stroke. Simplest math motor EVER!! Given 4" bore x 4" stroke x pi (3.14) x 8 cylinders = 402 cubic inches. Bore this thing out .060 and you get: 4.060 x 4 x 3.14 x 8 = 408 cubic inches.
60 thou ? = 0 .060 inch = 0.060 * 25.4 = 1.524 mm
60 mm = 2.362204724412 inchesDirect Conversion Formula60mm* 1 in25.4 mm= 2.362204724in
+/- .060 = 1/16 "
Check/replace the spark plugs and wires. If you're not going to replace the plugs make sure the gap is correct (should be either .040 or .060) and make sure the plugs are clean of oil or gas. If it still backfires after you replace the plugs/wires check the distributor and the timing.
a BOSS 414!
Well, if it is a 3.1Liter sfi then the gap should be .060". I'm pretty sure all engine for that year are .060" if they have the high out put coils on them. Let me know.
060 as a whole number? .060? 0.60?
6000/100
According to the emissions sticker on on my '96 says .060 but if you look in the users manual it says .045 which is correct I don't know. When I took the plugs out of mine they were about .075 so I'm guessing they started out at .060 and burnt to the .075 in the 82,000 miles. So when I replaced mine I set then m at .060 Gramps
.060 acres = 2,613.6 square feet.
This information can be found in your owner's manual, or under the hood on a placard. the 2.2 liter 4 cylinder plug gap is .060 Answer It is 60 thousandths
Yes, 060 is greater than 045
60 thousands
062
6/100
No