What's missing from this thread is that Ford Motor Company had two different part numbers for the same part. Well, not really. The assembly line used "engineering numbers". With this "engineering number", parts, and sub-assemblies, were designed, identified, purchased, received, inspected, inventoried, stocked, distributed and ultimately found their way to an appropriate vehicle. The "engineering number" document specified just about everything, dimensions, materials, finishes, inspection criteria and most important - who the manufacturer was. This documentation practice was a dual edged sword. It actually reduced paperwork in purchasing, inspection and inventory. One piece of paper "fit all". If a second (or more) vendor was used, a different "engineering number" was created. One "part", two "sources". This "practice did not happen often.
For vehicle service at a dealership, Ford used a slightly different number, a "service number", best described as a "stock number" or "inventory number". It was also a "looser" form of document. The "service number" actually referred back to an original Ford "engineering number", but often included additional "purchasing" (quantity in the bag), "inventory" (where to stock the item) and additional "engineering" requirements (finish being one).
The bottom line is - when you refer to any Ford Motor Company part number in discussion, like "for sale" or a "search for" (wanted), include the first FOUR characters of that Ford number. It makes a big difference.
Jim
One more "thing" - Exceptions are normal.