Fuel - Compression - ignition all in the right time.
If the engine is set up mechanicaly, the parts that work the ignition firing, timing, and injector timing should be a no brainer because the parts are not adjustable. The ECC does the rest once it knows the sequence. Some shops have test equipment that check the injector firing and pulse width. I had a bug in my engine years ago that Ford could not fix, they blamed the SVT parts. It turned out to be a bad relay that turned the fuel rail and ignitor on. Voltage would drop and the car would quit. Sometimes it would not restart for almost 1/2 hour. I had ignition, but the voltage (about 4 volts) was so low the injectors stayed shut. Make sure there is 12 volts to the feeds.
95s don't give you too many codes or clues to what is wrong. OBD I system is not hooked up to as many reference points as OBD II.