Okay, so today's pictures are terrible. I'll start with the new transmission crossmember. It's basically a square one-inch tube that is 1/8" wall, so pretty sturdy. Connected to it is kind of a triangular box that the actual rubber insulator mount on the bottom of trans bolts to/through (turbo 400 style). The box was removed from a 1x2 crossmember that I had to cut out to get the old trans out, but then I cut the box off, then re-welded the bracket to the new mount, which is now removable.
It's hard to see, but the tube (white one) is basically sandwiched between two triangular pedestals welded to some longitudinal tubes (redundant frame members of 1x2) and the floor pan. It has to be tapped into place with a hammer, then it is bolted through the floor, the tube, and then the pedestals. If all of this breaks, the 1x2 crossmember I welded back in will still hold the transmission up. Yes, the trans is independently removable in this position. I like redundancies with stuff like this.
One of the big annoyances with the 6l80 was ground clearance--it hung too low. The TKX is now almost perfectly level with the frame rails/rocker bottoms. This is good.
I also got a new driveshaft made and mounted, sort of. The old one had to be shortened an inch and have a new yoke installed (Ford C6, if anyone's wondering; the 6l80 used a turbo 400 yoke). I had new non-greasable u-joints installed and painted it white, because that was what I have in the garage.
I installed the lovely eBay-sourced headers, which fit great. They are basically the same as the ones I built the frame around, so updating the exhaust should be pretty simple. Not excited, though . . .
Then there's the new L96-style rectangle port truck intake I also sourced from eBay, with its 50-lb injectors (which hopefully work).
Finally, since the shifter situation has to greatly change, I had to rip up a bunch of sheetmetal and a bit of cross-tube in my trans tunnel. Great.
Given my seating position (basically back seat location), I may need to devise some sort of remote shifter, unless I think I can tolerate some sort of super-bent vintage-looking thing that would add a ton of unwanted travel to shifting . . .