I have had really good luck replacing the seal once I figured out how to do it. Don't even have to pull the box. Clean everything really well. Repeat step one. Repeat again if it has been leaking long. Get pitman arm puller. Break puller and get another one (I got lucky and got mine off first time. Pull the dust seal out from around the sector shaft. Remove the c-clip holding the seal. Now, here is where it gets messy. Get a pan and put it in a cardboard box (a big, shalow one works best with the top cut short. Fill this with rags or paper towles. Start your truck and turn the steering full lock. This will crank the pressure in the system way up and blow the old seal out. If you haven't taken the steps listed above, it will look like the Exxon Valdez ran aground in your grage. It makes a real mess! Reclean everything. Examine the sector shaft for the above mentioned grooves. If there are grooves you can get your fingernail into, you made a mess for nothing. If there is not, oil the new seal and slide it on. Seems like there are several spacers and dust seals to deal with. Follow the istilation instructions that come with the kit. Now comes the fun part. I installed and blew three seels untill I figured I was not seating the c-clip fully into the groove and the pressure would blow the seal out. So, special tool, part #00000. Take a 11/4" rigid pipe coupling and cut it long enough to use the Pitman arm nut to push on the c-clip (no room for a punch and hammer). Buy two, they are cheap and easy to cut too short! Install the seal and c-clip, slid the coupling on the shaft, put a big washer on it and crank the pitman arm nut untill you hear the c-clip snap into it's groove. Install the dust shield, Pitman arm, hook up the steering and go wheel!