I'll post a reply to my own thread in case someone might benefit from it. I just got done with installing a wicked wheel 2 and AFE wastegate. I did notice a difference. Its minimal. It's barely worth the effort performance wise. But I did notice a difference. I did the wastegate and the wheel at the same time, so I can't say which one it was that made the most difference. What I can say is that my EGT's did seem to be lower on the long uphill drags on the interstate this morning. I was rolling on it pretty hard and was in the neighborhood of 1200 ± a few, and that is a large improvement over previously stock turbo. I could almost pull 1500 on the same hill. So this improvement is well appreciated. I'm overly protective of high egts, so this part of it is worth the money. It's seemed to bring the boost up lower in the range, which was my goal. Rarely do I run 2800 rpm so I wanted the air flow curve to be lower.
Doing the work.... not bad. The disassembly, sucked. The install was good. Removing a few things that had not been apart in 245,000 miles was a pain. I decided to take the turbo off despite many people saying to do it in frame. I'm a technician for a living and always find it easier to do the critical component work right in front of me on a bench, so not to screw anything up. The turbo-to-ex.man bolts sucked. The ones on the engine block side were crazy tight. I suspected breaking a stud. But, with proper amounts of kroil at letting it sit over night to soak, they came off with a 12" extention and wobble socket going from the bottom. The outside two were not too bad. Turbo compressor housing snap ring....sucked. I bought a large 16" snap right set, with 90° tips and it was a miracle worker.
Overall, it would be an easy project if you didn't have to fight 245,000 miles of midwest rusted threads and stuck hoses. haha. I still say it's just barely worth the money, but what the heck. At least I won't sit around and wonder.