i cant seem to figure out how to upload pics on here.
but some pointers would be , for the rears,
-first coat them with amsoil MPHD or similar a few coats and let them dry a few days to keep rusting to a minimum.
- a second set of hands will be needed for lifting the old and new springs in and out of place, but the rest could be done pretty much by yourself, my brother helped me with the rears at my home garage with a good set of craftsman tools/ sockets/ impact and torque wrenches, ( whatever is listed in the instructions) a good set of jack stands for frame rails, then a bottle jack to move the axle each side when installing, and a good floor jack, blocks to lift rear at trailer hitch. be sure to torque to the specs in the instructions from ICON, they are different than the number i got from watching this video ( which is a good preview of what you're getting into.)
i left both the rear shocks in but removed the spare tire for install. otherwise not that hard, just heavy pieces and takes some time due to no access for power tools. plan on at least 4-5 hours, maybe more...
fronts i did the next morning by myself, watch this video for a walk through.
he is doing a collar install, but its the same up to the point of having the strut out and on the ground, from there either take them to a auto shop that has a heavy duty floor mounted spring compressor. Or if you're feeling up to it i was able to do it myself with a set of spring compressors from harbor frieght, you can rent them from most autozone's i believe. I would get 2 sets if you can. As the Geisers are soooo long of a spring and you need to compress it sooooo much to get it to fit down on the shock, i was stuck trying to compress about only 3/5 of the length of the spring. if i had a second set, i could have started the first set to compress down a bit, put the second set on 90 degrees across from 1st set and grabbed the next coil then tightened that one down, and so on with much more ease than i did with only one set. and near the end i had those compressor threaded rods so bent looking i thought each turn was going to be when they'd snap, LOL. front took about 4-5 hours as well. alot of time was spent compressing each spring, probably 30-45 mins each per spring.
alignment is not needed right away if you can't get to it , i called the guys at Geiser and they said people have ran them for a few thousand miles without it and were ok. That being said i had already had one scheduled at my local Ford dealer cost $90 out the door, and while it was streetable without an alignment it had a slight pull to the left when you let the wheel go. and was out of the green zones in a few parameters. I'd say run for a tank of gas and let the springs settle some and have it aligned a few hundred miles after install.
about all i can think of now, watch the videos a few times, they were a big help for me..
good luck!