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Table of Contents


Introductory Information ............................... 1
Safety Restraints ............................................ 11
Starting Your Bronco .................................... 59
Warning Lights and Gauges ....................... 73
Instrument Panel Controls .......................... 89
Steering Column Controls ........................ 105
Features .......................................................... 119
Electronic Sound Systems ......................... 149
Driving Your Bronco .................................. 175
Roadside Emergencies ................................ 237
Customer Assistance ................................... 255
Accessories .................................................... 267
Servicing Your Bronco ............................... 275
Quick Index .................................................. 355
Index ............................................................... 363


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Introductory Information


Ford’s Commitment to You At Ford Motor Company, excellence is the continuous commitment to achieve the best result possible. It is dedication to learning what you want, determination to develop the right concept, and execution of that concept with care, precision, and attention to detail. In short, excellence means being the standard by which others are judged. Our Guiding Principles q Quality comes first. For your satisfaction, the quality of our products and services must be our number one priority.


q You are the focus of everything we do. Our


work must be done with you in mind, providing better products and services than our competition.


q Continuous improvement is essential to our


success. We must strive for excellence in everything we do: in our products — in their safety and value — and in our services, our human relations, our competitiveness, and our profitability.


q Employee involvement is our way of life. We are a team. We must treat one another with trust and respect.


q Dealers and suppliers are our partners. We


must maintain mutually beneficial relationships with dealers, suppliers, and our other business associates.


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Integrity is never compromised. Our conduct worldwide must be pursued in a manner that is socially responsible and commands respect for its integrity and for its positive contributions to society.


Things to Know About Using This Guide Congratulations on the purchase of your new vehicle. This guide has information about the equipment and the options for your new vehicle. You may not have bought all of the options available to you. If you do not know which information applies to your vehicle, talk to your dealer.


This guide describes equipment and gives specifications for equipment that was in effect when this guide was approved for printing. Ford may discontinue models or change specifications or design without any notice and without incurring obligation. NOTES and WARNINGS


NOTES give you additional information about the subject matter you are referencing.


WARNINGS remind you to be especially careful in those areas where carelessness can cause damage to your vehicle or personal injury to yourself, your passengers or other people. Please read all WARNINGS carefully.


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RWARNING


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Finding Information in This Guide


After you have read this guide once, you will probably return to it when you have a specific question or need additional information. To help you find specific information quickly, you can use the table of contents or the index.


The Quick Index at the end of the book provides a page number following each item which indicates where detailed information can be found.


This guide has a table of contents at the beginning of the book to show chapter titles.


To use the Index, turn to the back of the book and search in the alphabetical listing for the word that best describes the information you need. If the word you chose is not listed, think of other related words and look them up. We have designed the Index so that you can find information under a technical term. Canadian Owners — French Version


French Owner Guides can be obtained from your dealer or by writing to Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited, Service Publications, P.O. Box 1580, Station B, Mississauga, Ontario L4Y 4G3. Your Maintenance Schedule and Record Booklet The Maintenance Schedule and Record booklet lists the services that are most important for keeping your vehicle in good condition. A record log is also provided to help you keep track of all services performed.


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About the Warranties Your vehicle is covered by three types of warranties: Basic Vehicle Warranty, Extended Warranties on certain parts, and Emissions Warranties.


Read your Warranty Information Booklet carefully to find out about your vehicle’s warranties and your basic rights and responsibilities.


If you lose your Warranty Information Booklet, you can get a new one free of charge. Contact any Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer, or refer to the addresses and phone numbers on the first page of this owner guide. Buying a Ford Extended Service Plan


If you bought your vehicle in the U.S., you can buy a Ford Extended Service Plan for your vehicle. This optional contract provides service protection for a longer period of time than the basic warranty that comes with your vehicle.


You do not have to buy this option when you buy your vehicle. However, your option to purchase the Ford Extended Service Plan runs out after 18 months or 18,000 miles. See your dealer for more details about the Ford Extended Service Plan.


If you purchased a Canadian vehicle and did not take advantage of the Ford Extended Service Plan at the time of purchase, you may still be eligible. See your dealer for the details.


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Special Notice NOTICE TO OWNERS OF UTILITY-TYPE VEHICLES As with other vehicles of this type, failure to operate this vehicle correctly may result in loss of control or an accident. Be sure to read the Additional Special Driving Instructions for Utility Vehicles in this book and the special supplement included with four-wheel drive vehicles entitled 4-Wheeling with Ford. AMBULANCE PACKAGES


RWARNING


Do not use this vehicle as an ambulance.


Your Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) Your Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) is the same as the warranty number that appears on your owner card. You should include this number any time you write to Ford Motor Company about your vehicle.


The Vehicle Identification Number is attached to your vehicle in the following places:


on the metal tag attached to the top of the instrument panel on the driver’s side — you can see the tag by looking through the windshield from outside your vehicle.


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Vehicle Identification Number (VIN/Serial Number)


on the Safety Compliance Certification Label - this label is attached to the left front door lock facing or the door latch post pillar. It is required by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and is made of special material. If someone tampers with it, it will be destroyed and/or a destruction pattern will appear.


The label contains the name of the manufacturer, the month and year of manufacture, the certification statement and the Vehicle Identification Number. The label also contains Gross Vehicle Weight Rating and Gross Axle Weight Ratings, wheel and tire data and information codes for additional vehicle data. For further information about the Safety Compliance Certification Label and the information contained on it, refer to the Index. Federal Highway Administration Regulation


Regulations such as those issued by the Federal Highway Administration or issued pursuant to the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA), and/or state and local laws and regulations may require additional equipment for the way you intend to use the vehicle. It is the responsibility of the registered owner to determine the applicability of such laws and regulations to your intended use for the vehicle, and to arrange for the installation of required


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equipment. Your Ford dealer has information about the availability of many items of equipment which may be ordered for your vehicle. Breaking Your Vehicle In Your new vehicle goes through an adjustment or break-in period during the first 1,000 miles (1,600 km) that you drive it. During the break-in period, you need to pay careful attention to how you drive your vehicle. q Avoid sudden stops. Because your vehicle


has new brake linings, you should take these steps:


— Watch traffic carefully so that you can


anticipate when to stop.


— Begin braking well in advance.


— Apply the brakes gradually.


The break-in period for new brake linings lasts for 100 miles (160 km) of city driving or 1,000 miles (1,600 km) of highway driving.


q Wheel lug nuts must be retightened to proper


torque specifications at 500 miles/800 km of new vehicle operation. Proper torque specifications are provided in this guide. Also retighten to proper torque specification at 500
miles/800 km after any wheel change or any other time the wheel lug nuts have been loosened.


q Use only the type of engine oil that Ford recommends. See Engine oil recommendations in the Index. Do not use special “break-in” oils.


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Cleaning the Outside of Your Vehicle Washing and Polishing Your Vehicle


Wash the outside of your vehicle, including the underside, with a mild detergent.


DO NOT: q Wash your vehicle with hot water q Wash your vehicle while it sits in direct


sunlight


q Wash your vehicle while the body is hot Pollen, bird droppings and tree sap can damage the paint, especially in hot weather. Wash your vehicle as often as necessary to keep it clean.


Take similar precautions if your vehicle is exposed to chemical industrial fallout.


Paint damage resulting from fallout is not related to a defect in paint materials or workmanship and therefore is not covered by warranty. Ford, however, believes that continual improvement in customer satisfaction is a high priority. For this reason, Ford has authorized its dealers to repair, at no charge to the owner, the surfaces of new vehicles damaged by environmental fallout within 12 months or 12,000
miles (20,000 km) of purchase, whichever comes first. Customers may be required to bring their vehicle in for inspection by a Ford representative.


Polish your vehicle to remove harmful deposits and protect the finish.


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Cleaning Chrome and Aluminum Parts Wash chrome and aluminum parts with the same detergent you use to wash the vehicle body, such as Ford Premium Car Wash Concentrate. You can use Ford Extra Strength Tar and Road Oil Remover or equivalent to clean grease, oil, and tar from chrome-plated parts, including wheelcovers, aluminum wheels, bumpers, or anodized aluminum parts. Cleaning Plastic Parts Some of your vehicle’s exterior trim parts are plastic. Clean with a tar and road oil remover if necessary. Use a vinyl cleaner for routine cleaning. Do not clean plastic parts with thinners, solvents or petroleum-based cleaners. If you have your vehicle rustproofed, remove oversprayed rustproofing with a tar and road oil remover. If rustproofing is not removed from plastic and rubber parts, it can cause deterioration.


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Safety Restraints


Important Safety Belt Information The use of safety belts helps to restrain you and your passengers in case of a collision. In most states and in Canada the law requires their use.


Safety belts provide best restraint when:


the seatback is upright


the occupant is sitting upright (not slouched)


the lap belt is snug and low on the hips


the shoulder belt is snug against the chest


the knees are straight forward


To help you remember to fasten your safety belt, a warning light may come on and a chime may sound. See Safety Belt Warning Light and Chime in the Warning Lights and Gauges chapter.


See the following sections in this chapter for directions on how to properly use these safety belts. Also see Safety Restraints for Children in this chapter for special instructions about using safety belts for children.


RWARNING


Make sure that you and your passengers wear safety belts. Always drive and ride with your seatback upright and the lap belt snug and low across the hips.


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RWARNING


Passengers should not be allowed to ride in the cargo area. Persons not riding in a seat with a fastened seat belt are much more likely to suffer serious injury in a collision. Cargo should always be secured to prevent it from shifting and causing damage to the vehicle or harm to passengers.


RWARNING


Never let a passenger hold a child on his or her lap while the vehicle is moving. The passenger cannot protect the child from injury in a collision.


RWARNING


To reduce the risk of serious injury in a collision, children should always ride with the seatback upright.


RWARNING


Never wear the shoulder belt under the arm. Never swing it around the neck over the inside shoulder. Never use a single belt for more than one person or across more than one seating position. Each seating position in your vehicle has a specific safety belt assembly which is made up of one buckle and one tongue that are designed to be used as a pair. Failure to follow these precautions could increase the risk and/or severity of injury in a collision.


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Lock the doors of your vehicle before driving to lessen the risk of the door coming open in a collision. Your vehicle is equipped with a dual locking mode retractor on the shoulder belt portion of the combination lap/shoulder safety belt for front seat passenger and a locking “cinch tongue” for rear seat outboard passengers. Dual Locking Mode Retractors Vehicle Sensitive (Emergency) Locking Mode In this operating mode, the shoulder belt retractor will allow the occupant freedom of movement, locking tight only on hard braking, hard cornering or impacts of approximately 5 mph (8 km/h) or more. The front seat belt retractor can also be made to lock by pulling/jerking on the belt. Automatic Locking Mode In this operating mode, the shoulder belt retractor will be automatically locked and remain locked when the combination lap/shoulder safety belt is buckled, and does not allow the occupant freedom of movement. This mode provides the following: q A tight lap/shoulder belt fit on occupant q Child seat/infant carrier installation restraint


RWARNING


Rear-facing infant seats should never be placed in the front seat.


This mode must be used when installing a child seat on the front passenger seat and rear outboard seats where dual locking retractors are provided.


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To switch the retractor from the “emergency locking mode” to the “automatic locking mode,” perform the following steps:


1. Buckle the lap/shoulder combination belt.


2. Grasp the shoulder portion of the belt and


pull downward until all of the belt is extracted, and when allowed to retract, a clicking sound will be heard. At this time, the belt retractor is in the “automatic locking mode” (child restraint mode).


3. A clicking sound will continue to be heard


as the belt is allowed to retract. This indicates that the retractor is in the “automatic locking mode.”


NOTE: When the combination lap/shoulder


belt is unbuckled and allowed to retract completely, the retractor will switch back to the vehicle sensitive (emergency) locking mode. See the detailed instructions under Safety Seats for Children in this chapter.


Locking Cinch Tongue


The “locking cinch tongue” will slide up and down the belt webbing when belt is in the stowed position or while putting seat belt on. When the “locking cinch tongue” of the lap/shoulder combination seat belt is latched into buckle, the “cinch tongue” will allow the lap portion to become shorter, but locks the webbing in-place to restrict it from becoming longer.


Your vehicle is equipped with safety seat belts containing a “cinch tongue” at the rear outboard seating positions.


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Before you can reach and latch a combination lap and shoulder belt having a “cinch tongue” into the buckle, you may have to lengthen the lap belt portion of it. To lengthen the lap belt, pull some webbing out of the shoulder belt retractor. While holding the webbing below the tongue, grasp the tip (metal portion) of the tongue so that it is parallel to the webbing and slide the tongue upward. Provide enough lap belt length so that tongue can reach the buckle.


NOTE: If you grasp the tongue by the tongue cover to lengthen the belt, the tongue cover will grab the webbing, making it difficult to slide.


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To fasten a “cinch tongue,” pull the combination lap and shoulder belt from the retractor so that the shoulder belt portion of the safety belt crosses your shoulder and chest. Be sure the belt is not twisted. If the belt is twisted, remove the twist. (For instructions on how to remove a twist, see the How to Untwist or Unjam a Safety Belt Retractor section in this chapter.) Insert the belt tongue into the proper buckle for your seating position until you hear a snap and feel it latch. Make sure the tongue is securely fastened to the buckle by pulling on tongue. Adjust the lap belt portion of the safety belt by pulling up on the shoulder belt until the lap belt fits snugly and as low as possible around your hips.


Lab and shoulder belt fastened


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Combination Lap and Shoulder Belts While your vehicle is in motion, the combination lap and shoulder belt adjusts to your movement. However, if you brake hard, corner hard or if your truck receives an impact of 5 mph (8 km/h) or more, the combination lap/shoulder belt locks and helps reduce your forward movement. The front seat belt systems can also be made to lock by jerking on the shoulder belt. NOTE: The rear belts cannot be made to lock


up by jerking on shoulder belt.


After you get into your vehicle, close the door and lock it. Then adjust the seat to the position that suits you best. To fasten the belt Pull the combination lap/shoulder belt from the retractor so that the shoulder portion of the belt crosses your shoulder and chest. Be sure the belt is not twisted. If it is, remove the twist. Insert the belt tongue into the proper buckle until you hear a snap and feel it latch. Make sure the tongue is securely fastened to the buckle by pulling on tongue.


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RWARNING


Use the shoulder belt on the outside shoulder only. Never wear the shoulder belt under the arm. Never swing it around the neck over the inside shoulder. Never use a single belt for more than one person. Failure to follow these precautions could increase the risk and/or severity of injury in a collision.


To tighten the lap portion of the belt, pull up on the shoulder belt until it fits you snugly. The belt should rest as low on your hips as possible.


Due to folding rear seats, sometimes the buckles and tongues toward the center of the vehicle may be hidden by the rear edge of the seat cushion. Pull them out so they will be accessible.


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While you are fastened in the seat belt, the combination lap and shoulder belt adjusts to your movement. However, if you brake hard, turn hard, or if your vehicle receives an impact of 5 mph (8 km/h) or more, the lap and shoulder belt will become locked and help reduce your forward movement. Adjustable Lap Belts Without Retractors


On the center position of the front and rear three-passenger bench seats you will find a lap-belt without a retractor, but does have a locking adjustable tongue. Shorten this belt and fasten it to buckle when you are not using it. To lengthen the belt, tip the tongue at a right angle to the belt and pull the belt over your lap until the tongue reaches the buckle.


Fastening occupant safety lap belts


To fasten the belt, pull the belt across your hips and insert the tongue into the correct buckle on your seat until you hear a snap and feel it latch. Make sure the buckle is securely fastened by pulling tongue.


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Adjust the belt so that it fits snugly and as low as possible around the hips:


If you need to lengthen the belt, unfasten it and repeat the procedure above.


If you need to shorten the belt, pull on the loose end of the webbing.


To unfasten the belt:


1. Push the release button on the buckle. This


allows the tongue to unlatch from the buckle.


Unfastening the front outboard lap/shoulder belts


Unfastening the rear outboard lap/shoulder belts


2. While the belt retracts, guide the tongue to its stowed position. If you do not guide the tongue, it may strike you or part of the vehicle.


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Instructions for securing child safety seats with combination lap/shoulder safety belts having “cinch tongues” are provided later in this chapter. How to Untwist or Unjam a Safety Belt Retractor


If you should jam the lap belt retractor by allowing the belt to retract when it is twisted, you can free the webbing with this procedure:


1. Pull on the belt with both hands to tighten it


on the retractor spool.


2. Feed the belt back into the retractor until it is completely retracted. Repeat previous step if necessary.


3. Pull the belt out of the retractor as far as it will go and untwist the belt or remove the object that is jamming the belt. Let the belt retract.


4. Then, pull the belt out and let it retract several times to make sure that the belt works properly.


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Procedure to Correct a Twisted Safety Shoulder Belt at the “D” Ring (if so equipped) Front and/or Rear Outboard Seating Positions


NOTE: The restraint system shown in the


following figures may be different than the restraint system in your vehicle. However, use these figures and this procedure to correct a twisted safety shoulder belt at any outboard seating position that has a “D” ring.


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1. Grasp the belt webbing at the “D” ring. See


Figure 2.


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2. Rotate and fold the belt webbing over itself


as required to remove the twist.


3. Feed the folded portion of the belt through


the “D” ring.


4. When completed, the safety belt should look


like Figure 3.


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Safety Belt Extension Assembly For some people, the safety belt may be too short even when it is fully extended. You can add about eight inches (20 cm) to the belt length with a safety belt extension assembly (part number 611C22). Safety belt extensions are available at no cost from your dealer. Use only extensions manufactured by the same supplier as the safety belt. Manufacturer identification is located at the end of the webbing on the label. Also, use the safety belt extension only if the safety belt is too short for you when fully extended. Do not use extension to change the fit of the shoulder belt across the torso.


RWARNING


Failure to follow these instructions will affect the performance of the safety belts and increase the risk of personal injury.


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Safety Belt Maintenance Check your safety belt system periodically to make sure that it works properly and isn’t damaged. If the webbing shows any wear, nicks or cuts, have it examined by a qualified technician to determine if replacement is necessary. Always have your safety belt system checked after a collision by a qualified technician. All safety belt assemblies, including retractors, buckles, front seat belt buckle support assemblies (slide bar) (if so equipped), child safety seat tether bracket assemblies (if so equipped), and attaching hardware, should be inspected after any collision. Ford recommends that all safety belt assemblies used in vehicles involved in a collision be replaced. However, if the collision was minor and a qualified technician finds that the belts do not show damage and continue to operate properly, they do not need to be replaced. Safety belt assemblies not in use during a collision should also be inspected and replaced if either damage or improper operation is noted. Cleaning the Safety Belts Clean the safety belts with any mild soap solution that is recommended for cleaning upholstery or carpets. Do not bleach or dye the belt webbing because this may weaken it. Air Bag Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) Driver air bag Your vehicle is equipped with a driver side air bag supplemental restraint system located in the steering wheel and identified by the letters “SRS” in the center of the wheel.


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The driver air bag is a Supplemental Restraint System (SRS), provided in addition to the driver lap/shoulder belt, and is designed to supplement the protection provided to a properly belted driver in moderate to severe frontal collisions. The supplemental air bag system does not provide restraint to the lower body. The Importance of Wearing Safety Belts


RWARNING


Safety belts must be worn by all vehicle occupants to be properly restrained and help reduce the risk of injury in a collision.


RWARNING


All occupants of the vehicle, including the driver, should always wear their safety belts, even when an air bag Supplemental Restraint System is provided.


There are four very important reasons to use safety belts even with an air bag system. Use your safety belts to:


help keep you in the proper seating position (away from the air bag) when it inflates


reduce the risk of harm in rollover, side or rear impact collisions, because an air bag is not designed to inflate in such situations


reduce the risk of harm in frontal collisions that are not severe enough to activate the supplemental air bag


reduce the risk of being thrown from your vehicle


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The Importance of Being Properly Seated


In a collision, the air bag must inflate extremely fast to help provide additional protection for you. In order to do this, the air bag must inflate with considerable force. If you are not seated in a normal riding position with your back against the seatback, the air bag may not protect you properly and could possibly hurt you as it inflates.


RWARNING


Do not place objects or mount equipment on or near the air bag cover on the steering wheel or in front seat areas that may come in contact with a deploying air bag. Failure to follow this instruction may increase the risk of personal injury in the event of a collision.


How the Air Bag Supplemental Restraint System Operates


The air bag supplemental restraint system has two main parts. One part is the air bag system with the driver air bag and inflator located in the center of the steering wheel. The second part is the electrical system, which has impact sensors, and a diagnostic module, and backup power supply. The diagnostic module monitors its own internal circuits and the supplemental air bag electrical system readiness, including the impact sensors, the system wiring, the air bag system readiness light, air bag power, and the air bag ignitor.


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The location of the air bag and warning label The air bag system uses a readiness light and a tone to indicate the condition of the system. The readiness light is in the instrument cluster. When you turn the ignition to the ON position, this light will illuminate for approximately six (6) seconds and then turn off. This indicates that the system is operating normally. NOTE: Maintenance of the air bag system is not required. A problem with the system is indicated by one or more of the following: the readiness light will either flash or stay lit, or it will not light, or a group of five beeps will be heard.


RWARNING


If any of these things happen, even intermittently, have the air bag system serviced at your Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer immediately.


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Tone generator


The air bag readiness light indicates the air bag system condition. However, a series of five sets of five beeps will be heard only if the readiness light does not work and there is a problem with the air bag system. This also means that the Air Bag Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) is in need of service. The tone pattern will repeat (five sets of five beeps) periodically until the problem and light are repaired. Unless serviced, the Air Bag Supplemental Restraint System may not function properly in the event of a collision.


RWARNING


Do not attempt to service, repair, or modify the Air Bag Supplemental Restraint System or its fuses. See your Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer.


The air bag system is designed to stay out of sight until it is activated. The air bag system is designed to deploy in frontal and front-angled collisions more severe than hitting a parked vehicle of similar size and weight head-on at about 28 mph (45 km/h). Because the system senses the crash severity rather than vehicle speed, some frontal collisions at speeds above 28 mph (45 km/h) will not inflate the air bag. The system activates when the sensors detect a forward deceleration equal to or greater than the deceleration experienced if you would drive your vehicle into a solid wall at 14 mph. In some side impacts, the forward deceleration of your vehicle can be great enough to deploy your air bag.


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The following four steps show how the air bag system works:


1. Sensors in the vehicle will detect the degree


of severity of a frontal impact. When the sensor system is activated, electric current flows to the inflator and the system ignites the gas generant.


2. The propellant then rapidly burns in the


metal container. The rapid burning produces nitrogen gas and small amounts of dust. The nitrogen gas and dust are cooled and filtered during inflation of the air bag.


3. The inflating supplemental air bag splits


open the trim cover. The supplemental air bag then rapidly unfolds and inflates in front of the driver.


NOTE: STEPS 1-3 TAKE PLACE IN A


FRACTION OF A SECOND.


4. After inflation, the gas empties through holes


in the air bag. The air bag deflates at once.


The surface of the air bags and the vehicle interior may be dusted with a powdery residue. The powder is cornstarch or talcum powder, which is used to lubricate the air bag as it inflates, and sodium compounds such as sodium carbonates (e.g., baking soda), and possibly a very small amount of sodium hydroxide that may be irritating to the skin and eyes, but is not toxic.


Right after air bag inflation, you may notice smoke (from the powder and dust) and smell the burnt propellant. This is normal.


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RWARNING


Air bag system components get hot after inflation. Do not touch them after inflation.


Air bags may not inflate in certain frontal collisions, even though the vehicle may be badly damaged. The fact that your air bag did not inflate in such a collision does not mean that something is wrong with the air bag system. Rather, it means the crash forces were not severe enough to need an air bag to prevent serious injury.


Inflated driver side air bag


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RWARNING


If the air bag is inflated, THE AIR BAG WILL NOT FUNCTION AGAIN AND MUST BE REPLACED IMMEDIATELY. If the air bag is not replaced, the unrepaired area will increase the risk of injury in a collision.


Disposal of supplemental air bag equipped vehicles


For disposal of air bags or air bag equipped vehicles, see your local Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer, or refer to the procedures in the 1995
Ford Service Manual. Information on how to order a service manual is available at an authorized Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer. You can also order a service manual using the order form in the Accessories chapter of your Owner Guide.


Service and information labels


Service and information labels are attached to the sun visors, the headliner above the sun visors (Canadian vehicles), and the radiator support in the engine compartment.


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Label on radiator support in the engine compartment Safety Restraints for Children In the U.S. and Canada, you are required by law to use safety restraints for children. If small children ride in your vehicle — this generally includes children who are four years old or younger and who weigh 40 pounds (18 kg) or less — you must put them in safety seats that are made specially for children. Safety belts alone do not provide maximum protection for these children. Check your local and state laws for specific requirements.


RWARNING


Never let a passenger hold a child on his or her lap while the vehicle is moving. The passenger cannot protect the child from injury in a collision.


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RWARNING


Passengers should not be allowed to ride in the cargo area. Persons not riding in a seat with a fastened seat belt are much more likely to suffer serious injury in a collision. Cargo should always be secured to prevent it from shifting and causing damage to the vehicle or harm to passengers.


RWARNING


Carefully follow all of the manufacturer’s instructions included with the safety seat you put in your vehicle. If you do not install and use the safety seat properly, the child may be injured in a sudden stop or collision.


When possible, put children in the rear seat of your vehicle. Accident statistics suggest that children are safer when properly restrained in the rear seating positions than in the front seating positions.


RWARNING


Safety belts and seats can become hot in a vehicle that has been closed up in sunny weather; they could burn a small child. Check seat covers and buckles before you place a child anywhere near them.


RWARNING


Never leave a child unattended in your vehicle.


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Safety Belts for Children


Children who are too large for child safety seats should always wear safety belts. (See instructions with your child seat, or contact its manufacturer, to determine maximum size of child that will safely fit in the seat.)


RWARNING


If safety belts are not properly worn and adjusted as described, the risk of serious injury to the child in a collision will be much greater.


If the shoulder belt portion of one of the lap and shoulder belts can be positioned so that it does not cross or rest in front of the child’s face or neck, the child should wear the lap and shoulder belt. Moving the child closer to the center of the vehicle may help provide a good shoulder belt fit.


RWARNING


If the shoulder belt cannot be properly positioned, move the child to one of the seats with a lap belt only (preferably in a rear seat) and use the lap belt.


Lap belts and the lap belt portion of lap and shoulder belts should always be worn snugly and below the hips, touching the child’s thighs.


RWARNING


To reduce the risk of serious injury in a collision, children should always ride with the seatback upright.


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Safety Seats for Children


Use a safety seat that is recommended for the size and weight of the child. Always follow the safety seat manufacturer’s instructions when installing and using the safety seat.


Ford recommends the use of a child safety seat having a top tether strap. Install the child safety seat in a seating position which is capable of providing a tether anchorage. For more information on top tether straps see Attaching Safety Seats With Tether Straps in this chapter.


When installing a child safety seat, be sure to use the correct safety belt buckle for that seating position making sure the tongue is securely fastened in the buckle and for a shoulder/lap belt combination with a sliding tongue make sure the retractor is in the “automatic locking mode.”


All child restraint systems are designed to be secured in vehicle seats by lap belts or by the lap portion of a lap-shoulder belt.


RWARNING


If you do not properly secure the safety seat, the child occupying the seat may be injured during a collision or sudden stop. An unsecured safety seat could also injure other passengers.


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RWARNING


Carefully follow all of the manufacturer’s instructions included with the safety seat you put in your vehicle. If you do not install and use the safety seat properly, the child may be injured in a sudden stop or collision.


RWARNING


Seatbacks should be upright for use with child safety seats.


RWARNING


Always keep the buckle release button pointing upward and away from the child seat, with the tongue between the child seat and the release button as shown in the following illustration.


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Installing Child Safety Seats


Your vehicle is equipped with a dual locking mode retractor on the shoulder belt portion of the combination lap/shoulder safety belt for the front seat passenger and locking “cinch tongue” for rear outboard passengers.


If you choose to install a forward-facing child safety seat in the front seating positions, move vehicle seat as far back as possible.


For front passenger seating positions equipped with a dual-locking mode retractor, use the following procedure:


For rear outboard seating positions, refer to cinch tongue procedure.


1. Position the child seat in the center of the


passenger seat.


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2. Pull down on shoulder belt, then grasp


shoulder belt and lap belt together. Figure 1.


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3. While holding the shoulder and lap belt


portions together, route the tongue through the child seat according to the child seat manufacturer’s instructions. See Figure 2. Be sure that the belt webbing is not twisted.


Routing the lap/shoulder belt


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4.


Insert the belt tongue into the buckle for that seating position until you hear and feel the latch engage. Figure 3. Make sure tongue is latched securely to buckle by pulling on tongue.


Buckling the belt


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5. Grasp the shoulder portion of the belt and


pull downward until all of the belt is extracted and a click is heard. At this time, the retractor is in the automatic locking mode (child seat restraint mode). Figure 4.


NOTE: The dual-locking mode retractor must


be in the automatic locking mode to properly restrain a child.


Setting the retractor to automatic locking mode


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6. Allow the belt to retract. Pull up on the


shoulder webbing. A clicking sound will be heard as the belt retracts. This indicates the retractor is in the automatic locking mode. Push down on the child seat while you pull up on the belt to remove any slack in the belt. Figures 5 and 6.


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7. Before placing the child in the child seat, forcibly tilt the seat from side to side, and tug it forward to make sure that the seat is securely held in place, Figure 7.


Checking that the seat is secure


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8. Double check that the retractor is in the


automatic locking mode. Try to pull more belt out of the retractor. If you cannot, the belt is in the automatic locking mode, Figure 8.


Checking the retractor


9. Check to make sure that the child seat is properly secured prior to each use. If the retractor is not locked, repeat steps 4
through 7.


To remove the retractor from automatic lock mode, allow webbing to retract fully to its stowed position and the retractor will automatically switch back to the vehicle sensitive locking mode for normal adult usage.


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Installing a Child Safety Seat at the Rear Center Seating Position with Locking Adjustable Lap Belt


1. Lengthen the lap belt. To lengthen the belt,


hold the tongue so that its bottom is perpendicular to the direction of webbing while sliding the tongue up the webbing.


2. Place the child safety seat in the center


seating position.


3. Route the tongue and webbing through the


child seat according to the child seat manufacturer’s instructions.


4.


Insert the belt tongue into the proper buckle for the center seating position until you hear a snap and feel it latch. Make sure the tongue is securely fastened to the buckle by pulling on tongue.


5. Push down on the child seat while pulling on the loose end of the lap belt webbing to tighten the belt.


6. Before placing the child into child seat,


forcibly tilt the child seat from side-to-side and in forward directions to ensure that the seat is held securely in place. If the child seat moves excessively, repeat steps 5
through 6, or properly install the child seat in a different seating position.


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Installing Child Safety Seats at the Rear Outboard Seating Positions (For lap and shoulder belts combination with “cinch tongues”)


Your vehicle is equipped with rear seat safety belts containing a “cinch tongue.” The rear outboard safety belts will have the following label:


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If you install a child safety seat or infant carrier in a rear outboard seating position having a combination lap and shoulder belt with “cinch tongue,” use the following procedure:


1. Grasp the belt webbing below the tongue


and pull as much of the belt out of the retractor as possible. Hold the belt out. See Figure 1.


NOTE: The belt webbing below the tongue is the lap belt portion of the combination lap/shoulder belt, and the belt webbing above the tongue is the shoulder belt portion of the combination lap/shoulder belt.


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2. With your other hand, grasp the tip (metal portion) of the tongue (not the cover) and slide the tongue up the webbing as far as it will go. See Figure 1. Release the tongue, but do not let go of the lap portion of the belt webbing.


3. While still holding the belt webbing below


the tongue in one hand, use your other hand to grasp the tip (metal portion) of the tongue and belt webbing together, and again pull out as much of the belt as possible. Then, let go of the lap portion of the belt webbing.


4. While holding the shoulder and lap belt portions together, route the tongue and webbing through the child seat according to the child seat manufacturer’s instructions. See Figure 2. Be sure that the belt webbing is not twisted.


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5.


Insert the belt tongue into the proper buckle for that seating position until you hear a snap and feel it latch. Make sure the tongue is securely latched to the buckle by pulling on the tongue. See Figure 3.


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6. Push down on the child seat and pull up on


the shoulder belt portion to tighten the lap belt portion of the combination lap and shoulder belt. See Figure 4.


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7. Grasp belt close to child seat and pull on the


shoulder belt portion of the combination lap/shoulder belt, then allow the belt to retract and remove all slack to securely tighten the child safety seat in the vehicle. See Figure 5.


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8. Before placing the child into the child seat, forcibly tilt the child seat from side-to-side and in forward directions to make sure that the seat is held securely in place. See Figures 6 and 7. If the child seat moves excessively, repeat steps 6 through 8, or properly install the child seat in a different seating position.


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9. Check from time to time to be sure that


there is no slack in the lap/shoulder belt. The shoulder belt must be snug to keep the lap belt tight during a collision.


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Attaching Safety Seats With Tether Straps General Instructions Some manufacturers make safety seats that include an upper tether strap that goes over the seatback and attaches to an anchoring point. Other manufacturers offer the tether strap as an accessory. Contact the manufacturer of your child safety seat for information about ordering a tether strap. You can attach a tether strap anchor bracket to the rear floor by using a tether anchor kit (613D74), available at no charge from any Ford dealership. Read and follow the instructions provided with the kit carefully for installation of the child tether strap anchor. Follow the child seat manufacturer’s instructions to attach the tether strap to the tether bracket. Ford recommends placement of tethered safety seats in a rear seating position with the tether strap installed to the tether anchoring point as shown in the instructions provided with the child tether strap anchor kit. This vehicle has provisions to install a tether anchorage in the front, right hand and all second row seating positions. It is easiest to install a tether anchor at the second row, rear, center seating position. If the tethered seat is installed in the front seat, Ford recommends the center front seating position, with the tether strap secured to the center rear lap belt tongue or to the webbing of the buckled center rear lap belt behind the child safety seat. The front, right hand seating position may be used if it is the only seating position available.


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RWARNING


Only use the tether attachment hole locations shown in the illustrations. The tether anchor may not perform properly if the wrong mounting location is used.


The rear lap/shoulder safety belts should not be used to secure the tether strap of a safety seat located in the front seat.


RWARNING


Failure to follow these precautions could increase the chance of injury in an accident.


RWARNING


If the anchor bolt(s) is ever removed, the hole(s) in the floor must be sealed to prevent the possibility of exhaust fumes entering the passenger compartment.


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