35-EcoBoost Firing Order
❓ Why Is Firing Order Crucial for the 35-EcoBoost?
The 1-4-2-5-3-6 order minimizes torsional vibration on the crankshaft, prevents harmful harmonic resonances, and ensures the twin-scroll turbochargers receive evenly spaced exhaust gas pulses. Without this order, the engine would shake violently, lose power, and fail prematurely. Additionally, the firing order directly impacts cylinder balance — the 35-EcoBoost’s 60° bank angle combined with even firing eliminates the need for a heavy balance shaft.
📌 Types of Firing Orders: Even-Fire vs Odd-Fire V6
• 120° crankshaft intervals
• Smooth power delivery
• Used on all modern V6 engines including Ford EcoBoost, GM High Feature, Honda J-series.
➡ 35-EcoBoost: Even-fire 1-4-2-5-3-6
• Uneven 90° and 150° intervals
• Rough idle, strong vibrations
• Used in some older Buick, Ferrari Dino engines. Modern engines avoid it.
Other types include flat-plane vs cross-plane (for V8) but for V6, the 1-4-2-5-3-6 order is the gold standard. The 35-EcoBoost firing order is sometimes confused with the 3.0L EcoBoost, which uses the same pattern due to shared architecture.
🔢 Cylinder Numbering & Firing Order Layout
Correct identification is essential. On Ford 3.5L EcoBoost engines (F-150, Explorer ST, Transit, Lincoln):
- Bank 1 (Passenger side / Right side): Cylinders 1 (front), 2 (middle), 3 (rear).
- Bank 2 (Driver side / Left side): Cylinders 4 (front), 5 (middle), 6 (rear).
- Firing order sequence: 1 → 4 → 2 → 5 → 3 → 6 → (repeat).
| Firing Step | Cylinder | Bank | Crank Angle (°) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1 | Passenger front | 0° |
| 2nd | 4 | Driver front | 120° |
| 3rd | 2 | Passenger mid | 240° |
| 4th | 5 | Driver mid | 360° |
| 5th | 3 | Passenger rear | 480° |
| 6th | 6 | Driver rear | 600° |
🛠️ How to Check & Verify Firing Order on a 35-EcoBoost
How to determine the correct firing order for repair or tuning:
- Inspect the underhood emissions label — often lists “FIRING ORDER 1-4-2-5-3-6”.
- Use a scan tool with Mode $06 data to view cylinder misfire counts; misfires will follow the pattern if there’s a coil issue.
- Perform a power balance test by disabling injectors one by one following the firing order, see if RPM drop is uniform.
- For older models or aftermarket ECUs (rare), use a timing light to verify spark sequence on plug wires (but EcoBoost is coil-on-plug, no wires).
- If replacing camshafts or timing chains, verify that the reluctor wheel and cam phasers are aligned according to the 1-4-2-5-3-6 pattern.
⚠️ Is It Safe To Change The Firing Order?
✅ Advantages of the 35-EcoBoost Firing Order
Even crank throws reduce internal bending moments.
✔️ Exhaust Pulse Uniformity
Each turbo receives pulses every 240° crank (equally spaced).
✔️ High RPM Stability
Smoother operation up to 6500+ RPM.
Consistent firing intervals improve torque converter lockup feel.
✔️ Longer Crankshaft Life
Reduced torsional fatigue vs odd-fire.
✔️ Lower NVH
Quieter cabin, less harshness.
📉 Disadvantages & Trade-offs
- Slight secondary vibration: Even-fire V6 still has a second-order imbalance that requires a small balance shaft in some applications (EcoBoost uses dual-mass flywheel to absorb).
- Complex exhaust manifold design: To take advantage of even pulses, the 35-EcoBoost uses integrated exhaust manifolds and twin-scroll turbos, which adds cost.
- Less “muscle car” sound: The even firing creates a smooth, high-pitched V6 note, unlike the rumble of a cross-plane V8.
- Aftermarket tuning limits: Aftermarket ECUs often default to a different firing order, forcing custom rewiring.
🚗 Use Cases: Where the 35-EcoBoost Firing Order Matters Most
Understanding the 1-4-2-5-3-6 sequence is vital for:
- Professional mechanics: Diagnosing misfire codes, performing cylinder leakage tests, replacing timing chains.
- Performance tuners: Customizing per-cylinder fuel trims and ignition timing for maximum boost (up to 25 PSI).
- Off-road & towing setups: Ensuring even torque pulses reduces drivetrain shock during heavy load.
- Engine builders: Degreeing camshafts and verifying valve timing events relative to firing order.
🎬 Live Firing Order Animation: 1-4-2-5-3-6 in Real Time
Watch each cylinder ignite sequentially per the 35-EcoBoost specific firing order. Cylinder numbers turn orange when firing.
💥 Next: Cylinder 1 | Full sequence: 1-4-2-5-3-6
🔁 Animation repeats every 6 steps (720° crankshaft)
🧠 Advanced: Firing Order & Camshaft Phasing on 35-EcoBoost
The 1-4-2-5-3-6 firing order determines which cylinders share a crankpin. On the 3.5L EcoBoost, the crankshaft has three rod journals each serving two cylinders that fire 120° apart (e.g., cylinders 1 & 4 share a journal, 2 & 5, 3 & 6). This arrangement reduces crank length and weight. The VCT (Variable Cam Timing) system adjusts intake and exhaust cam angles independently per bank, but the firing order remains fixed. When performing timing chain replacement, always set the crankshaft to Top Dead Center (TDC) on cylinder #1 (compression stroke) and align the camshafts according to Ford’s service procedure — any misalignment will break the firing order relationship and cause piston-to-valve contact.
🔄 Comparison: 35-EcoBoost vs Other V6 Firing Orders
| Engine | Firing Order | Type | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ford 3.5L EcoBoost (35-EcoBoost) | 1-4-2-5-3-6 | Even-fire (120°) | Smooth, high torque, twin-turbo optimized |
| GM 3.6L High Feature (LLT/LFX) | 1-2-3-4-5-6 (with offset crankpins) | Even-fire | Similar smoothness, but different firing order due to crank design |
| Nissan VQ37VHR | 1-2-3-4-5-6 | Even-fire | Requires balance shaft |
| Early Buick V6 (odd-fire) | 1-4-3-6-2-5 | Odd-fire | Rough idle, used split crankshaft pins |