Well I was expecting my clutch to die sometime. They always do. I was in Indianapolis evening rush hour traffic and "suddenly" the clutch felt different - in a bad sort of way. Within 20 miles my clutch pedal went from normal to having less than 2 inches of "feel". Was able to limp him home later that night. Fortunately I hit 10 green lights in a row and finally rolled onto I-69 northbound. By the time I came off my exit... I could only grab 4th gear so I continued home bound using rural roads. Third would have been "more better" but beggars can't be choosers. Got him to Day's and parked him there for the night.
After the transmission was out, I noted the front input shaft appeared to have a "milled" notch in the end of it. I went home and checked my spare tranny and confirmed the notch wasn't milled, it was worn by the pilot bearing. I hadn't wanted to swap in the spare tranny I had yet (got it from honkey_2.0 thru jluck) but it was simpler and quicker to just swap the transfer case out to the new tranny so that is what I did.
I'll purchase a new input shaft and needle bearing set in the future and the old tranny will be good and ready to go again.
When I removed the transmission shifter off the transmission housing, I noted the little metal plate that covers the bottom of the shifter was heavily corroded. It is held on with a screw at each corner. I took an air gun and buzzed the corrosion off with a nylon scrub wheel, cleaned the surface with Xylol and put a couple coats of Rustoleum on it. It occurred to me it would have soon had the same fate as a rusty oil pan.
I noted the removed clutch disc (OEM I believe) was manufactured in Spain. I will replace the OEM clutch with a Sachs. The Sachs disc was manufactured in Korea. Uhmm... for clarification I'm pretty sure that would be South Korea because North Korea doesn't produce much more than suffering that I am aware of. I'm good with Korean made parts. I think their quality control on average is far better than the average part manufactured in China. Just personal preference, I guess.
Anyway, gave me an opportunity to clean up and paint the top of the transfer case mount too. Think I'll go ahead and install the timing chain kit while Buster is in a warm garage as well. We have snow on the ground and the temperatures have returned to a more 'normal' winter here.