My truck has it. I installed it myself. I'm a fat pharmacist who used to have LOTS of wrenches, hammers, etc. etc. and it took me about an hour or two. Somebody competent could probably do it in 30-45 minutes. Be careful not to destroy the gasket that seals the axle to the new actuator enclosure. If you do, it's easy enough to make a new one from cardboard. Torqued down nicely, and then given time to absorb some of the gear-lube it won't leak. (Yes, I'm a redneck). You can feel the collar engage, and, in case you're still worried, the contact switch that turns on your dashboard "FWD" light stays in place. and will light up just like before.
I like it a lot.
These two details might be construed as "drawbacks", but, only by someone really, really picky, who's never dealt with farm equipment. (keep in mind that a proper truck is really a nicely appointed, street-legal tractor, when you get right down to it)
1: you need to slow down to about 1-2mph to pull the knob and engage the collar. Otherwise, you get a chatter like a newbie learning a manual transmission.
2: you might need to reverse and turn your steering wheel a little to disengage (de-torque) the collar, while pushing the knob back into its disengaged position.
These little trade-offs of convenience pale in comparison to the mess you might get into without your front axle working.
Oh, yeah. Remove the vacuum lines that lead backwards to the top of the T-case, and cork off their formerly-important ports. They just leak, anyway, and if you ever observe that no matter where you put the HVAC knob, all you get is defrost, it's because you've lost vacuum somewhere. The flapper-thing inside the dashboard is vacuum-actuated, and anything that costs you vacuum will put your damn flapper-thing into its default position, which is "defogger". Took me a while to track that down, while refrigerating my windshield in a highly humid environment.