Spent Friday night attempting to get transmission out of the car. Simple job but many of the items are a PITA, just as I remembered. Driveshaft is really tight fit and won't come out without removing the custom driveshaft safety loop. Exhaust is hammered but not leaking yet. Spent an hour on one starter bolt. Spent another hour on the last bellhousing bolt, but couldn't get it. Don't have the right tools.
Saturday morning I shopped for a replacement 1/2 impact. The existing one has had an intermittent issue where it barely operates, but after a few trigger pulls it has done the jobs for years. But it's not performing to it's specs. I have resorted to using my old pneumatic impact at times. Interestingly the local Ace HW had the same price as HD, Lowes and AMZ, so I bought it there. Then down the street to Autozone for a 1/2 drive 20" long extension. With the right tools, same bolt came out in 2 seconds. New unit is 600/800 ft*lb.
With trans ready to come out I spent a little time making a custom adapter for the trans jack. Get it to sit decent on jack instead of chaining it or ratchet straps. Well worth the time.
Finally able to get the trans out, the easy way.
No oil contamination or signs of problems.
Inspected the aftermarket 26 spline input shaft for clutch disc spline wear. Looks good to me. I don't remember who manufactured the input shaft. The OEM was a 10 spline.
The old clutch parts cleaned up for inspection. All used up. Some friction pads down to zero on outer edges. All 4 steel friction surfaces showing signs of high heat stress, some cracks. TOB worn. Did it's job well. McLeod can rebuild the clutch for about 1/2 the price of a new one, not including the flywheel. How long that takes, not sure.
New setup in comparison. New stuff only comes with a new matching flywheel, instead of the gold colored ring used to located the floater plate. Probably cheaper to make/buy a flywheel than the adapter. The rest looks the same.
Installed the new flywheel and torqued the bolts. Next step is to check the bottom disc endplay. Must be 0.020 to 0.025 or call tech. I measured 0.047 all around. So hard stop.
I measured the shim stack on all three floater posts. A 0.200 spacer, two 0.010 shims and one 0.005. Math would indicate that removing all three shims (0.025) should net endplay of 0.022 which is in spec.
So instead of rushing back together I cleaned the transmission and painted a few of the parts that are raw steel.
Called Mcleod and explained the situation. Tech didn't seem surprised, said shim or bend tabs as needed.