So, I ended up taking apart the manifold/pump. Its driven from the motor and has a small rocker arm that didnt seem to want to cooperate with my demands. So, I tore it apart. The rocker arm bolt goes through the arm bracket, through the pump and bolts to the manifold. 3 other cap screws hold the pump down to the manifold. take those out, and pull straight up on the pump. No gasket under it, its a machined surface fit. The pump is more or less, just a beautifully machined chunk of aluminum. It holds the pump gears, two springs and the two, for the lack of a better term, valves. These two valves were hanging up in the aluminum body and not moving smoothly. Polished those bad boys up, cleaned the rest of the snot out of it, reassembled the pump with the two springs and valves, put the check balls back into the manifold and bolt that bad boy back together. Be careful, this is a precision machined part with very tight tolerance to the manifold and the pump gears. Tighten the bolts in stages while using a 3/16 allen head wrench to check to make sure the gears are meshing correctly and not binding.
Put your reservoir on top, bolt it down, fill it with the correct fluid and bench bleed that damn thing for a half hour.
DONE.
Trim works great. Goes up and down like its new.
If anyone has any questions, please get ahold of me and I will help you as much as I can. Rebuilding this hydraulic unit is pretty simple. I will be getting together with my local seal guy and putting together a o-ring kit for the hydraulic ram cylinder and manifold. Most of the hard parts wont go bad since they are steel. A little polishing and new o-rings go a long way. Since this unit is gone and discontinued from Mercury, Its hard to find parts and the such for it. But rest assured, I will help you.