How did it go? Why, a total piece of cake of course, with pauses only drink a cool beverage, pat ourselves on the back, and chuckle about how easy this is. Oh, and also to wonder where that one extra washer might possibly belong and if that is the right way up to put in a slider...

Seriously though, it was great fun to do and I love the feeling of having done it hands on. I will say this, the first time you do it, no matter how much you have read about it in how-to's or watched others do it, when you are there doing it live there are always complications and things that slip the mind.
The oil change and gear oil change went really smoothly. It helped that Eric had the needed drip tray and turkey baster syringe, er, hi-tec gear oil measuring device. One tip, the hex-head oil filter is much easier to install due to the tight space for getting a tool in there. That all went great.
The air filter install was dead simple.
Opening up the transmission and installing the sliders was the comic relief for the day (and I use the word relief in the loosest possible sense). After removing all screws holding on the trans cover, that sucker was still stuck solid. I figured I must have missed a screw. No. This is where having the right tool for the job really helps—but who knew that tool was a rubber mallet? A couple of well places taps loosened the cover and off it came. (When in doubt, break out the rubber mallet...

I had thought removing the variator and clutch could be done with a ratchet. No way. A quick sprint to Harbor Tools to buy a $30, 12v Impact Wrench saved the day. That made the removal/re-install easy.
Once the nut holding on the variator was loosened, paying close (but not close enough) attention to where each of the washers were located and the variator's order of assembly, off it came. It was cleaned and new sliders and slide pieces were installed (I'm trying out a mix of 12g and 13g sliders for a combined 12.5g. Heaviest combo I've tried yet. More info on that later).
Being a newbee, the most doubt came in figuring out the correct seating of the sliders. Even though I'd seen photos and watched videos before, in the moment one forgets. Turns out we (Eric) had it right. But having a good photograph on hand would have been very useful here.
Reassembly was pretty straight forward.
All in all it was a great experience and it feels fantastic to have my DIY hands dirty. Doing any of this the second time will be much easier and much quicker.
As for total costs, I started with no tools and no parts, so I spent $110 on tools (64 piece ratchet set, torque wrench, 12v impact wrench, various adapters and extensions, spark plug gapper, rubber gloves) and $100 on parts (2 sets of Dr. Pulley sliders (12g and 13g), Dr.Pulley Variator Slide Pieces, oil filter, Motul oil, PGO air filter, spark plug). So for the most part all expenses were covered by the money I saved in doing it myself.
Tomorrow I change the spark plug (ran out of time for that today) and I am done with everything for another 2500 - 3000 miles.
Most excellent.
