The 4.6-liter 10th-generation Ford Thunderbird places its oil filter halfway up the driver-side block, turning a routine oil change into a wheelwell-access job with extensions and swivels.
The layout blocks easier approaches: the sway bar prevents access from below, while the filter’s high position near the exhaust manifolds adds heat and can make an over-tightened filter even harder to remove cleanly.
That packaging problem stems from the MN12 Thunderbird’s design history, as Ford adapted a chassis originally built around the 3.8-liter V6 to accept V8s and later the 4.6-liter Modular engine for 1994.
Ford appears to have avoided the added cost of a remote-mounted filter or a redesigned filter stand, leaving owners of the 1994-97 cars with one of the trickiest oil-filter locations in the segment.