Hey Terry, the diff isn't that bad to do but there are some important things you need to know before diving in. If you install your new bearing onto the pinion with the wrong shims behind it, you will need to remove it to get the right gear pattern and that's where the trouble starts, if you don't have the right equipment it will be a real job. If you can get someone from a place that does these on a regular basis to at least check it and tell you what thickness of shim you need, that will take a lot of the work out of it for you. A good qualified shop should have the test bearing setup that they install on the pinion, check the gear pattern then install the correct shims and bearing once they have that all figured out. One way is to get a pinion bearing and have the inner cone honed out enough that you can just slide it on by hand, you can set up your pattern and make sure everything will work, then remove the test bearing and install the permenant stuff. A bearing heater is the way to go for installing the pinion bearing, you don't want to use a torch but you could get it hot in the oven if you don't have a bearing heater. It will need to be about 400 degrees, you make sure you have the correct shims on the pinion and it doesn't even hurt to have the pinion in the fridge for a while. Once you are ready, you can actually drop the bearing onto the shaft and once it cools, it's not going anywhere. Just some tips, there are probably a bunch of others as well but that's as much as I can tell you.