I would be interested in hearing from someone that had a "real" professional do a swap like this for a customer.
I'm talking a genuine automatic to 5 speed manual change-over where the entire focus is on just the meat and potatoes.
No other stuff like was done here or on my own car like repainting headers, fixing a dented oil pan, modifying a console, replacing leaky freeze plugs or any of that.
I am curious about how much time it would take someone with a lot more experience. I promise, I would not feel bad about the time that I took, nor should others that have done it at home.
Stuff seems to get in the way that adds enormous amounts of time.
This swap took just shy of 2 months of Saturdays or Sundays with an average of 5 hours a day. Rich had to drive over, drive home, work a job that runs more than 40 hours a week, do his daily activities with his great wife and kids/grandkids and put other things off to do this. He did the majority of the work because he owned the car. I only stepped in as as needed to help with stuff he wasn't quite sure about.
My own swap took less time partly because I was off work and my car was at my own house.
Can this be done in a solid week of work?
I think so. The hard parts are now easier than they were before. Bell housing runout measuring is easy once you understand how to do it. If no other work is done during the swap, maybe a week or close to it is possible IF you plan ahead and get all 3 sets of offset dowels then send back the ones you don't need. Robb MC sells the .007, .014 and .021 dowels. I don't understand why they are those weird sizes but if they allow proper runout, so be it.
The drive line may be done in a day if you have a shop nearby with quick turnaround.