
So this is the new, doesn't interfere with the axle version of the oil drain.
I think it'll be fine given how much bigger all the plumbing is than the orifice that is draining oil.
Since I now have a 1/2" NPT female on the turbo and a 3/8" NPT female on the pan, if this gives me any trouble I will find someone with good tubing flare & bend tools and make a single solid line with the subtle sigma curve (or a big loop) required to avoid the axle w/ this turbo. 1/2" stainless steel perhaps.
I'd also like to point out that you should never, ever, buy any "surtrack" products.
initially i had made a regrettable decision to only service the outer cv joints. That went off without a hitch. Then i realized that i was stupid not to do the inners, and ordered inner boot kits.
RH inner was fine.
LH inner, well, has some deep gouges in the inner race.
Mind you, I don't want to spend ANY money on these axles. The plan is to find (in a junk yard, or someone parting out) an 85-up cabriolet or rocco and get oem 100mm axles, joints, and spindles. Clean up the spindles and have new bearings pressed in. Have the shafts media blasted and maybe powder coated. Install 100mm flanges in the 020-7a with the 80% shim kit from peloquin.
I did actually try to get an inner joint from a junk yard mk1. Couldn't get all the bolts out, stripped the head of one, didn't have my cordless drill with me. The next day they crushed the car. oh well.
It turns out that it's cheaper to get a complete half-shaft via rock auto than to get a Meyle inner joint. Empi sold their axle business to "USA Industries" a few years ago and what you get when you order an Empi axle these days is getting very bad reviews on the vortex. So i bought a Surtrack half shaft assembly because i couldn't find any negative reviews.
Box arrives, I unpack it, check everything out, throw away box.
Two days later i go to install the shaft and note that the outer boot is already torn, right on the edge of the joint where it would tear if it got smacked against something.
I didn't want to deal with a return and i don't want an outer boot that is that fragile anyway so i bought a boot kit from napa yesterday, and then spent 2 hours failing to get the outer joint off the shaft. Ultimately i damaged the joint trying to get it off. My guess is that the circlip inside the joint isn't properly formed and instead of slipping inside the joint and letting it slide out, it's caught between the joint and the splines and is now bent over and going nowhere.
So i took the inner joint off of that shaft and installed it on the rusty old OEM shaft with the extra Rein inner boot kit i already had.