I disagree about many of the above statements. The 6b doesn't weigh 2500 lbs...it weighs around 1100. The 4bt weighs around 750, or about the same as a big block gas engine. As for cost, I compared my Cummins swap to replacing the bad 360 gas engine with another 360. I already tried the junk yard route, and the motor only lasted about a month after the warranty was up...I had around $1500 into a junkyard replacement, which lasted 4 months (thats a $650 engine, all new gaskets, seals, timing set, new exhaust manifolds to replace the rusted ones, and more). A new engine would have cost me at least $3000, and thats with my labor installing it.
I have around $4000 cash into my 4bt swap, which includes a $2000 Frito van, $650 low mileage NV4500, $500 clutch and flywheel from Napa, Dodge bellhousing, Dodge flywheel housing, clutch hydraulic parts, exhaust, and lots of misc. items. I still have an aluminum Frito van in very good condition, which I could get $1500 out of just for the aluminum; or toss in a couple hundred dollar 350 and sell it. So in the end I will have around $2500 into it.
The labor of installing a small Cummins into a straight axle truck is very little...fab up the motor mounts and bolt it all together. I had TONS more work, because I have IFS in my Durango, so I had to fab a custom oil pan to clear it; and my front differential actually bolts to the engine (dumb Dodge design), which I had to fabricate complex brackets for. I also put a manual trans into a vehicle that never came with one, and fit a 3/4 ton transmission into a vehicle that never came with a trans that size. Even with all that, the actual work took about 5 three day weekends. There were a couple weekends we took off while waiting for parts, but the actual work was about 15 days. At least 3 of those weekends were spent just making the oil pan and diff brackets.
As for the firewall statements, thats just not true. Check out
www.fordcummins.com for kits to install a Cummins 6b into just about any body style Ford, with NO sheet metal modification. I even know of a guy who put one in a Dakota without moving the firewall! I have tons of room with the 4bt, I can see how a 6b would fit. For clutches, there are many out there to handle a 6b. You can get a stock replacement for a couple hundred bucks that will handle a stock 6b. No, I wouldn't trust a 4 speed behind a 6b, at least not if you plan to work it hard.
For more info about the 4bt swap, go to
www.4btswaps.com Adapters won't cost all that much...I sold my Chevy adapters that came with my Frito truck on ebay for $300. That included the flywheel housing, flex plate, torque converter, and flexplate crankshaft adapter. Everything you would need to hook it up to a GM auto trans, and all you would need extra would be a flywheel for a GM manual trans. I would say you could bolt a 4bt to a GM trans for under $500, auto or manual.
Pics of my Durango swap:
http://s226.photobucket.com/albums/dd315/nhdiesel/Cummins Durango/
Jim