Bleeding the slave wasnât hard at all. Only problem was that the slave didnât come with the little rubber seal so it was leaking at first but then I just used the seal from the old one. It was still good. I didnât drop the sub frame or remove the control arms. Just removed the ball joints and moved the brackets over to remove the axles. I removed the charge pipes and RMM before that. On top just removed the air box, battery tray, battery tray bracket, shift cable bracket, motor mount and the additional bracket attached to the trans. Bought an engine support for $80 at harbor freight which worked perfect. I made the bracket to attach to the motor which connects to the motor support out of a thick piece of steel so I didnât have to buy one. Marked the bolts from the bell housing because some are different sizes. There is one bolt that wonât come out completely because it hits the down pipe but it slides out enough to not have to worry about it. I did not have to remove the starter motor. I also replaced the flywheel. I know there is a flywheel stop tool but didnât want to spend the money so I used a dull chisel to stick into the teeth of the ring gear with a bolt in one of the holes for the bell housing for leverage. It will not damage anything. It worked great minus some awkward positioning as I did it on jack stands. I did have a set of hands to both actually drop and install the trans. Itâs not heavy (100 lbs) but itâs kind of awkward because you have to tilt it to remove so itâs just better to have someone at least support some of the weight while you maneuver it. Thatâs the main stuff. Of course you have to remove some electrical connections as well. Also had to remove the the headlights and cowel. Torqued all to spec along the way. I donât think Iâm missing anything but anyone can feel free to ask me about it if there are questions.