Made some progress...
On monday I basically just pulled the 4R70 out, and didn't do much of anything else. I did find one kind of scary thing though...
One of the pieces of insulation between the floor and the gas tank had come unclipped, and it was rubbing on the driveshaft, and apparently that was enough to put some serious gouges into it. It's about 1/4" narrower where it was rubbing than it is where nothing was touching it. Luckily the CVPI driveshaft right next to it is ready to replace it. I'm just glad I had the garbage 2-piece driveshaft in there and not a 93 shaft.
This weekend I pulled the interior apart and started some more serious stuff on the swap. Here's the final bracket for the slave cylinder on the T45
The dash out, and me cursing the guy who invented jute, as I cut away the stuff where the clutch pedal needs to go.
Now is when things got complicated. Here is the clutch pedal bolted in place
As you can see, the clutch pedal blocks off the 2 holes where the wiring harnesses come into the car. I was only able to use 2 of the 3 studs where the pedal goes through the firewall, because there just wasn't any metal behind where the other one was supposed to go. I do have it securely bolted to the top cross piece though, so hopefully it won't flex too much. My firewall is pretty much screwed though.
Here is the plug that did go up against that square hole in the upper left corner of the firewall.
Unfortunately since the clutch pedal covers part of that hole up, I will have to instead shove the dash harness side through into the engine bay, connect to that large black connector, and just shove that back down into that small space in there between the firewall and the shock tower. In that above pic you can sort of see where the clutch pedal bracket is blocking off that hole for that connector. Also this unfortunately means that since the connector will just be shoved down in there and not clipped to the firewall, it will take up more room and I won't be able to fit the clutch reservoir on the shock tower where it is supposed to go, so I'll have to figure out exactly where to mount that. Maybe I'll zip-tie it to the brake master cylinder or something, I don't know yet.
Here's the hole in the trans tunnel extended forward so that the shifter can come up into the car.
I'll make a plate to block off where the auto shifter originally sat, and then just use a boot to cover up where the stock T45 shifter comes in, and then bolt up my extension mechanism, and hide it all under the console.
After all that, we were pretty much wiped and out of time (I was running on about 2 hours of sleep saturday night, before getting up and doing this all day sunday, so by about 7:30PM on sunday, I was shot), so we put the dash back in the car temporarily so we could steer and pushed it out of the shop.
Here is the ECM sitting where it will be permanently mounted.
Once I got the dash out of the car, there wasn't as much room as I thought where that HVAC tube was. Instead I found that it fits perfectly in front of the bracket where the center of the dash bolts in place at the bottom. You can sort of see the ECM in this pic through where the HVAC controls will later go. I had to trim one tiny piece of metal for it to sit perfectly, and I also had to cut off the vent for the rear heat where it is supposed to mate with the tube in the console. The good aspect of this is that the only thing that won't work anymore is the rear heat, but that never really worked anyway, plus I hardly ever have anyone in the back seat anyway. The only downside is that if I ever need to get the ECM out of the car, the whole dash will have to come out. I will have enough room to access the chip so I can remove that fairly easily if I need to for a re-tune or something.
I also replaced the blend door actuator while I was in there. I also found out that I had to also replace the grey arm, so I ordered one of those today. I also need to replace the metal rod that connects the 2 together, since mine is completely missing. Unfortunately that part is obsolete, and no dealer in the entire country has one, so unless anyone happens to have one laying around, I think I'll have to just make a new one from sheetmetal, which kind of sucks. Anyway, I think most of the hard stuff is done now. My goals for this week are to finish making my extension harness now that I know exactly how long it has to be, make the hydraulic line to go between the master and slave cylinders, and install the pilot bearing, flywheel, clutch, trans, and new driveshaft into the car. Then next weekend we pull the dash out again, replace that other arm for the heat, permanetly mount the ECM and extension harness, fit all 10lbs of **** into the 5lb bag that is under my dashboard and engine bay now, and then fully re-install the dash into the car, and HOPEFULLY the car should drive out of the shop on sunday.