Thanks for the reply brd.
That would cause an unbalanced clutch and bad vibrations, it would take a lot of force to do that which would prevent it from jumping in place.
I lost you in the bold.
I have used large screw drivers with sockets slipped over them to create a sort of alignment spline successfully. You could probably get an alignment tool from the parts store also.
If I understand the screwdriver socket idea correctly, one would need some sight to overlook the alignment. Would work well if the motor or transmission was out of the car and one was in a hurry without the guide. I have to align the disk while the transmission is propped up by a jack inside the trans tunnel as far back as possible. So being able to see ANYTHING alignment wise is impossible.
I aligned the disk by feeling the distance between the teeth of the disk and the edge of the pilot bearing. I took 5 minutes just feeling around until I was satisfied with what seemed a consistent gap length around the circumference of the disks teeth. Hope that makes some sense. I'll send center force an e-mail and see if they will ship me a guide "on the house". Otherwise if It comes to taking the transmission back out ill order one from a parts store.
I have watched some "bad pilot bearing" videos and I'm not hearing anything familiar.
Do you think their is enough clearance depth in the bell housing to allow the tapered end of the input shaft to not fit in the pilot bearing? My gut tells me there's not, but my gut has mislead me a time or two.
And also just to not forget... Some noise also started after the re-install. I want to say its the ring gear on the flywheel slapping the starter gear, that what it sounds like and seems to be coming from that area. When the engine is running under load you can hear it, and as I "engine brake" the noise gets louder.