update:
everything works great except the shifter linkages don;t want to cooperate with each other. the jeep column shifter and linkage rotates one direction at the firewall and the ford shifter linkage rotates the other way at the transmission. once i make a little L adapter, all i have to do is get the inspection done and the jeep will be legally (ha ha ha, as in i already drive it around the neighborhood) able to be driven around town.
i am going to do a tune up and oil change though, also. new plugs and all the stuff associated with a tune up will be done.
with the stock 3.07 gears and 33s, the jeep will spin the tires without thinking about it on turns so you have to not floor it at turns or people look at you funny. it will spin the tires on straight take offs also but you really have to get on it to do that. acceleration wise, the jeep goes from cruising to up the on ramp a whoooole lot faster then the stroker did before. this power train combination is what should have come in a wrangler, the jeep just wants to go now. even though i set the combination back farther then i wanted, accidentally, it still required a longer drive shaft out back so i don't need the t-case drop kit anymore. i have to replace the power steering pump because it died sometime between removal from the bronco and instal into the wrangler but i have no issues driving with no power steering, the jeep is very light weight. (and the engine is 60 or 40 pounds lighter then the I6)
all in all, i think anyone wanting to upgrade their stock power train should consider a 302. it uses the stock electrical system and radiator, the stock exhaust and the ford exhaust are the same diameter so it just requires cutting at matching points and a coupler, and no matter which transmission/t-case you pick, its still going to be shorter then a jeep automatic and I6.
the ford standard trans uses the same bolt pattern on the bell housing to transmission as a jeep so you can take a ford bell housing and bolt it to your jeep ax-15 and then not even have to mess with drive shafts, if you want a stick. advanced adapters or novak sells the special pilot bushing you need if you go that route though and you have to trim the input shaft by 5/8" and bevel it.
this is also a very cheap swap if you are going from a jeep 6 cylinder to a v8, wayyyyy cheaper then swapping a chevy v8 because of all the jeep parts you will reuse.