Let's see, over the past couple of days, I reinstalled the alternator and the air filters, and anything else needed to get the car back on the road. Hit any zerk fitting I could find with some grease, especially the ones in the line of fire of the ATF and power steering leaks. Took it for a test drive, and other than the rear end noise, all seems well. It drives nicely with the new tires. The leaks appear to have been dealt with. I may want to wrap a little extra hose around where the transmission cooler lines cross some metal edges, though. I was able to fit the nitrous line, and it was long enough to do the job. I'm also a bit dense, as it turned out there was an 18" AN-4 fuel line in the kit, which is shorter than I wanted, but I should be able to make it work, assuming nitrous is installed (more on that below).
Took it to wae's trailer, and things went a little south there. Trying to load it was a nerve wracking experience for me, and I'm not sure much better for him. He needed to constantly direct me, and at one point when the front wheels were on the trailer, and the rear wheels were just starting up the ramps, we had about 1/2" clearance on the passenger side and an 1/8" on the driver's side. While it would have slightly improved once the car was on the trailer, based on the shape of the body line, that just seems to close. Somehow I was convinced to give it another shot, and I spit a block of wood out from under the rear wheels. This all took quite a while. I decided to call it, and we'll either need to borrow a wider trailer, or one without side rails, or I'll just go ahead and drive to the challenge. Right now, the latter seems most likely.
If I drive down, I am seriously considering not installing the nitrous. Having it give me practically no budget room if something goes wrong, and I really don't want to have to strip it off in the parking lot in Gainesville. Also, I'll want the car to be running well for the drive home, and am a bit worried about pushing it in the drags until something goes. Admittedly, this also means I could go buy a cheap stereo for the drive down, and not be stuck with just short range (the antenna won't go up) AM/FM on the car's speakers
In other news, I think the transmission is a bit overfilled, so I plan on siphoning out some ATF this morning, then taking it for another highway drive, as it is going to be raining. I want to see if I can replicate the behavior I thought I felt before where it may have been missing during steady state driving in the rain. I'd like to know if it is really a problem before I commit to a multi day drive.
Another consideration is what tools to bring. Right now, the only jack I have that can lift the front end weighs well over 100 lbs, and is fairly large. The rear sits low enough I don't want to put it in the trunk. It probably won't fit on the floorboards. May have to grab a lighter weight jack, and just lift one side of the other of the front if need be. Without a big tow vehicle, I also won't be bringing tools for every occasion. Will just have go with the basics, and assume I'll buy or borrow something if I have a failure that requires specialty tools.