Thanks to all who replied. This has been typical of all of my diy attempts. After much searching on this forum, Haynes manual, and other places (1aaauto on u tube), I felt pretty confident that I could tackle this job. I had already replaced window regulators before, mostly on foreign cars though. I had all of the necessary tools: new regulator,3/8 bit,drill,punches, sockets, steel rivets, rivet gun. Unfortunately I think a Heavy Duty gun is needed. Thanks Caro!
What I thought was going to be the hardest part, drilling out the rivets, was much easier than I had anticipated. In fact I wasn't sure if the rivets were stainless or aluminum?
Anyway, I pulled it out and put it on the bench. Rememebering that the assembly was removed in the down position. I now began to compare the replacement to the original. Typical, the wrong part. It was for the passenger door. I return it to the 3 stooges and bring the otiginal to prove my point. No problems returning it, just frustrated that I wasted an hour and a half round trip,
This is where it gets interesting. Remember, The regulator was removed in the down position. I put it on the bench to transfer the window motor. Forgetting all safety warnings, I removed the motor under tension!! DOH!!
The last bolt came out, the arm swung down like a mousetrap. My knuckles didn't even have peanut butter on them! Lots of blood. Not pretty.
I cleaned up and commenced back to work. With the aid of my neighbor, we switched the motor. Bolted 4 of the 6 bolts. Reglued the window to the clamps(?) and tightened them to the regulator. The window is in the "up" position while the silicone dries.
I'll let yinz know how well it works when its dry in 24-36 hrs.