I can't remember who inspired this, I think it was from the old forum and I'm just now getting around to building it.
Here's the hobbs switch, relay and vacuum solenoid that I'm pretty sure is from a '91 Golf gasser:

The hobbs switch had something like 10m1 threads, not what I wanted. I ran a 1/8" NPT die down them so I could screw a 1/8" barb (not pictured) to it. I've had buzzing coming from my boost gauge and heard that a restrictor would keep turbo pulses from getting to the gauge. I didn't want pulses getting to my hobbs switch either so I plugged the end of both 1/8" barbed fittings with solder and reduced the hole to the size of a pin. It stopped the buzzing on the gauge so it probably helped keep pulses from the switch too.
A better look at the dual vacuum solenoid. I slid pieces of vinyl tubing over the ends of a couple of the nipples so the rubber fuel line would fit tight over them without having to use a reducer (green arrows). When the boost is low, the wastegate is connected through one solenoid to atmosheric pressure. When boost hits 15psi, the other solenoid routes boost pressure to the wastegate and it opens.
The piece of metal tubing next to it is what I cut off the metal wastegate line to make hose routing easier.

This is on my '91 Golf, which has 2 studs attached to the firewall. I cut a piece off the original vacuum solenoid mounting bracket. The 2 holes were already there so I just twisted it and used it to mount the solenoids to the firewall.

...and the controller mounted to the firewall and plumbed. I thought I took a better picture than this but if you look past the spaggetti (AC and fuel lines) it's not too hard to see what's going on:
