I don't have a writeup, but I'm new to the mustang engines (was a Jeep man in a former life
) and I was able to do my h20 pump with little problems.
I'd say with a haynes/chiltons in hand it is a very simple job with no special tools required.
From what I can remember off the top of my head:
-Drain your coolant (this is a good time to flush your radiator)- remove the lower hose from the radiator (drivers side). Disconnect and remove all hoses to the pump (makes it easier with them out of the way, I find)- replace those that need replacing.
-Loosen the bolts on the water pump pulley BEFORE you remove the s-belt, then remove the belt and pulley.
-The water pump has a s*** load of bolts holding it down- refer to the new one to locate them all.
-There is one bolt you may think you need to remove the vibration damper to to get to- you do not! Just remove the pulley (you can use a socket on the main crank bolt to break the pulley bolts loose). You'll know which one I mean when you can't find it at first
-Once you have the water pump out, remove the elbow on the intake and replace your thermostat following the cleaning procedure below- also, make sure you get the gasket for the thermostat while you're at the parts store, for some damn reason they don't include it a lot of times with the actual thermostat and you end up having to run back out for it
-Clean the crap out the the mating surface. There is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING worse in this world than going through all this trouble only to find you have a leak after reassembly because of shoddy/lazy cleaning.
-Clean it again, use some carb cleaner or similar to really clean it, then some alcohol and a clean cloth to get all the cleaner/oil/remaining residue off.
Finally, as they say, reassembly is the reverse of removal
Fill 'er up with coolant, if it is overheating you may need to "burp" air out of it- ensure your engine is cold, fill the radiator to the top and the overflow to the "cold" mark. Leave the cap off and start the engine. While keeping an eye on the temperatures let it run until it "burps" out any trapped air in the system.
If I missed anything I'm sure someone will be along shortly to add/correct :SNSign: