A couple of days progress didn't amount to what I wanted. It's Sunday night and I really thought I'd be almost done. In fact I barely got the old engine OUT.
I learned I can separate the fuse box and pull out large wire plugs to get those wires loose. Also a couple of plugs got the computer loose. From there it was a nightmare chasing wires, disconnecting them, feeding them back to the main loom, releasing the nearly 50 different styles of wire guides and 20 different plugs. Some of the things I just broke hoping the new engine has some that I didn't pay attention to.
Getting ready to tear the fuse block up.
Look at all those wires!
I didn't want to disconnect the power steering pump so I unbolted the whole accessory module and pulled it back on top of the computer support. Of course I snapped off one of the fingers that clamp the computer.
I got that huge mass of wires peeled back and layed over the right fender. I'll clean that later. When I pulled the intake off I found a mouse house on top of my valley pan. Hm. I just realized I need that throttle body. I need to learn to pull the plug and drain antifreeze from the block. I keep undoing things and making a huge mess. Amazing how much coolant came out when I removed the water pump. There was even more when I got the engine out and it tilted forward on the floor.
Does this mean I have a Chevy Mouse motor officially? Those intake runners are NASTY. This new engine is going to be so much cleaner.
After a number of adventures I got the engine out. There's a stud sticking up off the back of the right side coil pack. It doesn't hold anything, it's just there. When I lifted the engine that hooked on the AC hard lines on the fire wall. I freed that and started moving forward when something hung up again. That same stud had found part of the wiring harness and locked onto that. You know I'm putting just a bolt back in that.
My leaking transmission cooler lines also managed to play a huge part in getting in the way. I didn't realize that they were in a bracket bolted to the block until I started pulling. I couldn't get to it with a wrench at that point so I popped the lines out of the bracket. I guess I need new lines to fix that leak anyway. Those lines are also keeping the starter from coming out with the engine in.
Getting to this point wore me out for the day.