I was helping a friend get an '85 jetta td (Garrett T3) on the road and after changing the clutch (the pushrod had at least a 1/8" slop in the bushing and seal

) , heater core, reattaching the exhaust manifold that had two nuts missing and the rest loose (hopefully it fixes the lack of boost issue) and lots of other little stuff I started changing the t-belt.
Got it all apart and was changing seals and checked the outer IM bearing for flaking. It was terrible, half the width was gone at the wear point.
Luckily I stock two sets of bearings just for such occasions as this, the first set is for try one and the second for attempt #2 which so far has worked. So I drove it in with a hammer and screwdriver while my friend held it from falling into the oil pan with his finger.
For installing the new one we oiled it, lined up the oil holes and using the IM shaft, seal holder/retainer and longer retainer bolts, pressed it in by tightening the bolts little by little. The retainer hit the block slightly before the bearing was completely in so we used a large washer between the retainer and IM shaft to hold the retainer back and then pressed it in the rest of the way.
After the bearing, shaft and retainer where back in the shaft turned easily by hand

Compared to the last attempt this was a breeze, last time I ruined a bearing by pounding it in with an ill fitting pipe cap and after waiting a few days for the new bearing to arrive I pounded it in "gently" this time and deformed it just enough that the shaft wouldn't fit in without "machining" the bearing out with sand paper.
Of course, using the shaft as the guide won't work with the inner bearing but from what I've read it rarely needs changing anyways.