There are people selling EDIS trigger wheels of different sizes from time to time on ebay.
I think mounting depends on your crank pulley. On the Euro 2.5L pulley, i think the easiest would be to mount it on the outside, as it has a fairly flat face, with good space for bolting a wheel on with screws. On my engine, a 2.5 that came from a 75, the pulley looks different. It is bigger, with "slots" for belts i guess originally for power steering, and A/C. On this pulley a front mounting doesn't look as easy. I was planning to put the wheel behind the pulley, but then the generator belt was pushed out a few millimeter, so i abandoned this setup. I guess the best would be to get the EDIS wheel pressed on to the outside diameter of the pulley. But that would require some machining. I havn't done it yet, so i can't help you with pictures.
Mats is correct. The path of least resistance is to have a machine shop make a wheel that will fit the pulley. It needs to be 34 equal spaces and 1 double space.
Don't forget to follow the directions EXACTLY when fitting the pulley. The missing tooth is 60 deg after the sensor at TDC. You can put the missing tooth and sensor anywhere you want on the pulley/engine so long as you have the proper number of teeth (6) between the sensor and gap at TDC.
60 deg applies to V6 engines. Check the MegaManual for 4, 8 and 12 applications.
Clever those Ford engineers. 36 teeth, 360 degrees.
-Peter
Don't forget to follow the directions EXACTLY when fitting the pulley. The missing tooth is 60 deg after the sensor at TDC. You can put the missing tooth and sensor anywhere you want on the pulley/engine so long as you have the proper number of teeth (6) between the sensor and gap at TDC.
60 deg applies to V6 engines. Check the MegaManual for 4, 8 and 12 applications.
Clever those Ford engineers. 36 teeth, 360 degrees.
-Peter