Charles, I just finished doing an engine/transmission swap on Daimler/Chrysler product and I pulled the engine and trans as an assembly. I used an engine crane aka "cherry picker" on a smooth concrete floor. I've been doing this kind of stuff periodically for 20+ years and seeing that weight raised high enough to clear the radiator support STILL gives me the willies. There's more than enough weight (potential energy for you engineers) to do serious damage to your car and kill you too if something screwy happens. On the swap I just did, the factory manual made it quite clear that the front wheels should be blocked up about 10" in order for the transmission tailshaft to clear the floor during engine/trans removal. That made the necessary lift height even scarier. So, while removing the powertrain as a unit is easier for someone with the right tools and experience, you may want to remove the engine and trans separately. The trans is not too tough to drop out the bottom, and when you remove the engine you don't have to tilt it severely so the trans comes out. I'm pretty sure that the 57s were built using a body drop. That is, the frame, suspension, steeering, and drivetrain were all assembled and then the body was lowered onto the nearly complete chassis. That indicates to me that removing the engine and trans as an assembly might be very tight. Especially on a car with factory A/C. As far as dismantling the donor car... I wouldn't do anything to the donor car that I wasn't going to do to the recipient. That way you can use the donor car operation as a dry run to see how things go. If parts get bashed up or broken you know what NOT to do when you do the other removal. That's the philosophy I used when I did my latest swap since it was an unfamiliar vehicle: make my mistakes on the car that was expendable, not the keeper. My .02 Pete in PA From: PiscesM21@xxxxxxx Date: Wed, 14 Jul 2004 15:59:59 EDT Subject: IML: Need Info on Changing engine Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx --part1_d1.113513e9.2e26eabf_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit I have a 1957 Imperial which is a rust bucket, and I was lucky enough to find a 1957 Southampton with no rust at all. The Southampton doesn't have a drive train, so I am going to transfer the drive train to it from the rust bucket. Is it easier to remove the engine and transmission together (392 Hemi) or separate them. The most important thing is... I am a novice, I have never changed an engine before. I do have a 10 ton engine puller with an adjustable lifter to change the weight around while lifting. Should I put the front end up on ramps (heavy duty)? Since I am scrapping the car later (Imperial) I have been removing parts, would it be easier to remove the grill and slide it out with all the front removed? ie: radiator, frame for radiator, and grill. I appreciate any and all help on this, it will take a while to remove it, as I am partially disabled. I appreciate any ideas and knowledge to remove the engine & trans. Also what additional parts should I remove to keep for spares, since I'm parting it out? Thanks for any and all information Charles in Calif.