this ended up taking roughly 8 hours. i didn't have a large enough socket to pull the nut off the bottom of the pitman shaft, so i did it over at a friends place. lucky for me that i ended up there. after getting everything apart, i went ahead and put the pan under the shaft and started her up. after cranking the wheel a number of times i went to take a peek, nothing happened. i tried this for a bit longer, and then called in my friend (who has more experience working on cars/trucks/tractors than i will ever hope to have) to see what he thinks. after closer inspection, he notices that the outside seal, which should be the dust seal, isn't a dust seal at all, but a line of black silicon caulk. needless to say this complicated things. he was busy watching his son so i set to work scraping off the caulk. after getting most of it off, i noticed a metal washer (indicating that the previous owner re-used the factory seals, as they used washers as spacers). after this i attempted for a second time to crank the wheel to force the seal out. still no go. so then i called my buddy in again, and we decided there must be an easier way to get this washer out, without disassembling the entire steering box. this is where things got tough. first i tried to shift the washer, hoping maybe my power steering pump just didn't produce enough pressure to blow it out. wouldn't budge an inch. then I grabbed a punch and thinking if i could at least get the washer lose, maybe it'd come out easier. so i started hammering on it trying to get it to shift backwards, nothing. by this time i was frustrated enough with it, i didn't care if it came out intact. so i grabbed a cordless drill and put a good sized hole in the side, and jammed an awl in it. after spending 30 minutes or so yanking on this awl in every which direction, it was getting late and i was about ready to give up for the day. so i drilled a hole on the opposite side, grabbed a second awl, and gave it a few more attempts using two awls, but it still wouldn't budge. so i got a ride home. today when i got there, my friend had a couple ideas, after trying to turn it with a punch, hitting the sides of the holes, we moved on to plan B. i put a self tapping screw in each hole, and grabbed two pry bars. she finally broke free, but not after putting a little english behind it. from there it was easy. pulled out the seal, which was a pretty big mess, put in the new ones, drove 'em with my home-made seal driver (credit to crbnunit), got all the gears filled, and took her home. needless to say it was pretty frustrating spending almost 6 hours getting a puny little washer out. but it's done, and i'm happy.