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
119 gallons.500 gallons if agriculture use.1000 gallons if special harvesting
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