(also 9-25-2020)
A "known" issue with the Ecoboost motors is carbon build up on the intake valves. For years the crank case vents have been routed to the intake system so anything coming out of the crankcase (think oil vapors) gets burned up in the motor (good, well, better, for the environment). Non-direct injection motors have liquid fuel in the intake stream. This liquid fuel cleans/rinses that intake valves on the way by and reduces the carbon build up on the valves that end up as a result of the oil vapor hitting the hot intake valves. Direct injection motors put the fuel DIRECTly into the combustion chamber, so they don't have this "rinsing" affect from the liquid fuel, resulting in more carbon build up on teh intake valves. The solution is to add a oil catch can to try to get the oil vapor to condense and drop out of the air stream before it goes back into the motor.
Sounded like a good plan, so I added one of those too. Part of the "orientation kit" I picked up from Ford (now discontinued, but I have all the part numbers if anyone is interested) had a Mustang intake manifold. This moves the throttle body to the front of the motor instead of near the bottom (normal on the Focus/Fusion). As a result the fittings on the manifold are in different locations. Most of the Fusion fittings were able to be reused (cut off the hard tubing, add hose). I don't have a lot of shots of those steps, but it's pretty straight forward, I'm sure you can imagine...
The coolant lines were actually pretty easy. The "Orientation Kit" that I described earlier contained a lot of parts from a 2016 EcoBoost Mustang, they included the Mustang water piping that comes off what is now the "back" of the motor. This saves a lot of room, and brings the radiator connection point all the way to the "front" of the motor. I found a top rad hose from a 2000 V6 Camary that had the correct shape. Just had to shorten the ends and it bolted right up. The lower rad hose is the Miata hose with some of the motor side cut off, and one cut made near the middle to rotate the motor side. The heater hoses are altered Miata parts, with a couple straight sections added. there's not a lot of room around those, so I don't have any pics.
Fueling was really straight forward. The OEM hard lines (and the fuel inlet to the high pressure pump) have a ridge that holds the fitting on, and use an o-ring to seal. So, 2 adapter to go from that to AN-6, about 3 feet of AN-6 braided PTFE fuel line, and Bob's your uncle. I added some clear hose over the braided fuel line to protect both the fuel line, and anything else the braid may rub against.
So that covers most of the mechanical stuff, now I've moved on to the electrikery side. Wish me luck!