It will fit the quantum pan if a small section is cut out of it. Not exactly necessary, but possibly helpful. I like the integral rubber gasket.Andrew
I've heard that there's a "mist" of oil hovering around in the bottom, and the windage tray helps eliminate it by catching the oil slinging off of rotating parts and making it drip into the oil pan. This reduces the mist of oil the crankshaft has to rotate through, helping lessen any drag caused by the mist. True/false? Meh, the `trays are cheap these days so one might as well use it instead of cork.Any longitudinal application will require the small section to be cut out. The section to cut out is the area where the subframe goes under the oil pan (without the cutout the `tray doesn't sit flat with the oil pan's gasket surface). If you have a special oil pan, there's more to cut out
windage tray's have been proven on the dyno to give a couple HP in high perf apps. now translate that to a 70hp diesel.. and you'll get 1hp if your lucky :lol: but i too like the re-useable rubber gasket part, and the not starving my motor while i run through a corner real fast.
Quote from: "VW Fox"I've heard that there's a "mist" of oil hovering around in the bottom, and the windage tray helps eliminate it by catching the oil slinging off of rotating parts and making it drip into the oil pan. This reduces the mist of oil the crankshaft has to rotate through, helping lessen any drag caused by the mist. True/false? Meh, the `trays are cheap these days so one might as well use it instead of cork.Any longitudinal application will require the small section to be cut out. The section to cut out is the area where the subframe goes under the oil pan (without the cutout the `tray doesn't sit flat with the oil pan's gasket surface). If you have a special oil pan, there's more to cut out What is that pan off of?