I spent the weekend in the garage working on the transmission. I was able to get the transmission disassembled as far as I care to go.
Started simple by removing the gear selector rods and clutch forks. There are a bunch of springs and steel balls in the bearing support plate that like to fly out when the bolts/rods are removed. It sure was fun chasing them around the garage (set the stage for the day I guess).
Here's my method of organization. I taped the parts onto cardboard and scribbled down the disassembly number from the FSM on the tape. I also tried to note what gear/gearset. In the end I have two of these cardboard pieces completely filled.
My "modified" puller to get those hard-to-reach bearings and clutches. This was probably the most useful/frustrating tool of the weekend.
After that I basically forgot to take pictures because I started to get pissed off. It's stragithforward in theory. After the bearing there's a huge, 44 mm locknut, then the 5th gear pinion and bearings, then the 5th/reverse clutch, and the reverse pinion and bearings. The locknut took some effort bit I finally broke it loose (over 150 ft-lbs). The 5th/reverse clutch was annoying because there literally wasn't any surface for the puller to grab. I ended up completely diassembling it (pretty simple, actually) and carefully working around the reverse synchro to pull the clutch off. What took the cake for being the biggest PITA was the countershaft. According to the FSM a few taps with a brass hammer is all that's needed to break the mainshaft and countershafts from their bearings. The mainshaft popped right out of it's bearing but the countershaft didn't want to cooperate. I ended up having to pull it and its bearing out of the bearing support plate, which involves a few extra steps I was trying to avoid. Shortly after removing counter shaft bearing:
Note the lighting change - it was well after dark by this point. You can see the giant-ass socket used for the mainshaft lock nut in the background. Quick shot of the countershaft (top), maintshaft (middle), and bearing plate (right) all separated.
You can see the bearing still on the countershaft and the mainshaft bearing still in the support plate. Both have been removed since that picture was taken. All that work just to get to this:
The "input shaft" and second gear pinion. The input shaft needs to be cut down a bit to fit with the RX-7 transmission cases. Once that's done I get to clean all the individual pieces and reassemble. The synchros all look good so I've no plans to replace them now. I spent the better part of Sunday cleaning 24 years of demon sludge (road grime + engine oil + transmission fluid) off/out of the transmission cases in preparation for paint.