The first Essex V6 released was a 3.8 L version introduced for the 1982 model year as an option on the
Ford Granada. Bore and stroke were , for a total displacement of . Output was at 4200 rpm and of torque at 2800 rpm. Most early engines had a 2-barrel
Motorcraft 2150 carburetor, while 50-state Lincoln Continentals and California Granada-Cougar-Thunderbird-XR7 cars got Ford's Motorcraft 7200 carburetor with variable venturi.
Central Fuel Injection became available in 1984, raising output to at 3600 rpm and of torque at 1600 rpm in models so equipped.
Multi-point fuel injection (single port) became standard on the 3.8 L V6 in 1988, raising power and torque to at 3800 rpm and of torque at 2400 rpm. Engines upgraded with Ford's
EEC-V Powertrain control module (PCM) received a small increase in output to , if they did not have other enhancements to increase output beyond this already. The 1991–1995 Police Package
Taurus, 1991–1994
Lincoln Continental and 1995
Ford Windstar had a high-output version of the 3.8 L with better cylinder heads and other modifications that produced and of torque depending on application and model year. A 3.8 L V6 with SPI was introduced in the 1996 Windstar. With a compression ratio of 9.3:1, this engine was rated at at 5000 rpm and of torque at 3000 rpm. The upper intake manifold has a sticker located on the passenger side of the forward plenum denoting "Split Port Induction". For 1999 the 3.8 L in the Mustang was updated to use the split port cylinder heads originally introduced on the Windstar, but did not use IMRC, leaving all twelve intake runners open at all times. Output of the V6 in these Mustangs was at 5250 rpm and of torque at 2750 rpm. With the addition of IMRC to the Mustang in 2001, engine output increased slightly to at 5500 rpm and of torque at 2800 rpm. A nine-digit serial number appears on a label on the right side (front) valve cover. It also appears on a barcode label on the transmission side of the right side head. Applications: • 1982
Ford Granada • 1982–1983
Ford F-100 • 1982–1997
Ford Thunderbird and
Mercury Cougar • 1982–1986, 1994–2004
Ford Mustang • 1982–1986
Mercury Capri • 1983–1986
Ford LTD and
Mercury Marquis • 1988–1995
Ford Taurus and
Mercury Sable • 1988–1994
Lincoln Continental • 1995–2003
Ford Windstar Supercharged 3.8 L Ford developed a
supercharged version of the 3.8 L Essex V6 that was used in two
Ford MN12 platform cars beginning in the late 1980s. A belt driven
Eaton M90
roots-type supercharger spinning at 2.6 times engine rpm, to a maximum of 15,000 rpm at the engine's 6000 rpm redline, provided up to of boost. An intercooler was added to cool the intake charge. Internal changes to the engine included an engine block and cylinder heads modified to accommodate increased coolant flow, a fully counterweighted forged crankshaft, a billet camshaft with revised cam profiles, and hypereutectic alloy pistons, along with a reduction in the compression ratio to 8.2:1. Output of this engine was at 4000 rpm and of torque at 2600 rpm. Five Thunderbirds with pre-release supercharged Essex V6s were supplied to the Arizona Highway Patrol in 1988 for road testing, even though the supercharged engine never became part of an official police package. In 1991 Ford again sent a batch of supercharged engines, this time in production Thunderbird SCs, to the Arizona Highway Patrol for hot weather testing. The supercharged Essex 3.8 L debuted in the new-for-1989
Thunderbird Super Coupe and
Cougar XR-7, becoming the first supercharged engine offered by an American manufacturer since the
Studebaker Silver Hawk of the late 1950s or early 1960s. The standard transmission in the Thunderbird Super Coupe was a Mazda
M5R2-RKE 5-speed
manual transmission, while a 4-speed
AOD automatic transmission was optional. The supercharged Essex was dropped from the Cougar XR-7 in favor of a V8 shortly after the start of the 1991 model year, but continued to be used in the Super Coupe. For the 1994 and 1995 model years the engine received revisions that increased power to at 4400 rpm and torque to at 2500 rpm. The supercharger got a larger, square-style inlet, a larger attaching inlet plenum, and
Teflon coated rotors. The engine received larger fuel injectors, and the compression ratio was raised to 8.5:1. The Super Coupe was offered until 1995, after which production of the engine stopped. Applications: • 1989–1995
Thunderbird Super Coupe • 1989–1990
Cougar XR-7 ==4.2 L==