Most of the trouble you encounter will be uninstalling your current transmission. I recently finished a straight automatic swap and it took me 21 days because I didn't know what I was doing. The process is too lengthy on the automatic uninstallation end to compare but it's still fun. I like how I need a dozen tools to do this and only 2 in my Snap-On set can actually do anything.
Time: 3hrs 20min
Shifter cover: + screwdriver - 2 screws, 8mm screwdriver - 2 screws
Shifter linkage: 15mm wrench
Shifter guard plate: 3/8 screwdriver - 4 screws
Transfer case & transmission guardplates: 9/16 wrench & 16mm socket - 9 bolts
Transmission pan(
drain): 13mm wrench - 14 bolts
Transfer case speedometer cable(
drain): phillips screwdriver
Drivelines: 8mm wrench - 16 bolts
4x4 shift linkage: 9/16 wrench
Transfer case: 9/16 wrench - 6 nuts
Vaccuum flange: 12pt 10mm wrench - 1 bolt
Flexplate cover: 9/16 wrench - 4 bolts
Torque converter: 14mm wrench - 4 bolts
Starter: 9/16 wrench - 2 bolts
Starter cable: 3/8 wrench
Carb linkage: vicegrip
Transmission cooler lines: 13mm wrench & 16mm crowfoot, - screwdriver
Bell housing: 9/16 socket - 3 bolts, 9/16 wrench - 3 nuts, 5/8 socket - 2 bolts
All of this is incredibly easy assuming you don't have to deal with anything insane like I did:
LOTS of mud/grease that took me a few days to scrape and clean
Stuck transfer case nut in an awkward place that had to be chiseled off
Several degraded nuts and bolts
Huge ATF mess
A "professional" mechanic that constantly stripped bolts(and sudden trips to machine shops to fix this)
Unclean work area(pine needles and grease everywhere)
Kids running around moving random bolts/nuts
Reinstallation took me 20x as long because of this mess. Installing a clutch and bolting in a manual transmission would be
so much easier than what I just went through and it would be far more rewarding. If I ever get my hands on a 4WD Borg Warner T-5, I'll make a photo/video documentation of it all for everyone. I don't know what it is about these Eagles but even with modern stop and go traffic, I can't even bat an eye when I say a manual transmission belongs in these cars. Period.
All 6cyl. cars. The 4cyl. use different bellhousings and transmissions.
Tell that to my car. What I just described above is me eviscerating a Chrysler A-904 transmission that is remarried to a 258 engine. The real pain is reading in every manual that it's what goes to a 4cyl, not a 6.