Hi again Mark,
The lifting brackets you need can be seen at
https://www.mossmotors.com/Shop/ViewProducts.aspx?PlateIndexID=29116, items #62 and #63. The front bracket is usually left in place on TR engines (I recommend using Grade 8 fasteners here). The rear one is often removed and omitted when head work is done while the engine is in the car. Both these brackets should be pretty easy and cheap to find used. Two possibilities are Ted Schumacher at tsimportedautomotive.com or triumphsonly.com if you don't have a local source.
I'm not all that wild about the original rear bracket using that head stud, because I hate to un-torque just one to remove or install the bracket. IMHO, there's the possiblity of warping the head or at least ruining the head gasket seal, but I've never actually had a problem. The bracket interferes with the exhaust header/manifold, too, so has to come off when removing that. So I've been working on a different design for a rear bracket in my TR4, that attaches to the flange just above the starter. However, there are some clearance issues with the firewall, heater hoses and throttle linkage, still to be resolved.
Since you have the front clip off the body, engine removal should be pretty easy. Instead of a big engine hoist, I use a half ton chain hoist hanging from my garage ceiling. A pair of these also allow me to lift the body off the frame quite easily. When it come to the engine/gearbox though, I only use one, tilting a little as the assembly lifts, and then roll the car out from underneath. Piece of cake and a one-man job... although for safety's sake a second person should be around!
Probably you'll run into some difficulty getting the front engine mounts to slip out of the holes in the front engine plate. Some levering or prying is usually necessary and more difficult with old, hardened rubber mounts. I'm not sure if the TR2 has the engine torque-limiting bracket on it, down at the bottom of the front plate, on the RH side. If so, that needs to be removed entirely before trying to lift the engine out.
I'm also not certain if any of TR2 steering gear needs to come out, even if temporarily, while removing the engine. Removing the steering rack makes engine removal easier on TR4, but isn't really mandatory.
A complete TR 4-cyl. engine weighs a bit over 400 lbs and the gearbox adds about 90 (120 for overdrive g'box). So, whatever you lift with, keep this total in mind.
Don, so long as you use a spring compressor, there is no problem installing the entire front suspension with or without the engine and/or body on the frame. I've done it several times. While it is possible to use the car's weight to install *some* types of springs, I'd never do so since it's safer to use a homemade, <$10 spring compressor made of a lenght of threaded rod and a few nuts and washers bought at a local hardware store.
It *is* important to go back to loosen and re-tighten all the fastenings at bushed pivot points, once the full normally laden weight of the car is back on the suspension. Otherwise, the bushings might bind in the wrong area of suspension travel.
Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif.
'62 TR4 CT17602L