drill & tap is a lot easier than buying a bung and welding it on
Quote from: jtanguay on July 19, 2009, 12:38:00 pmdrill & tap is a lot easier than buying a bung and welding it on It's a lot harder/more expensive to repair if you screw it up. I also think drilling and welding stamped sheet metal is much easier than trying to drill and tap a precise hole in the block while laying under the car. Rather than drilling cast iron with progressively larger drill bits, in tight spaces between the firewall and block, I could use 1 hole saw on the oil pan then quickly weld it up. I probably have the appropriate NPT bung laying around in my workshop.
I'm not sure why the caps and the "WTF" and the "friggen". Not enough sleep? Too much coffee?It is my understanding that having the end of the drain below the oil level in the sump can create situations where any positive crank case pressure can prevent the turbo from draining properly. It is similar to having a valley in the return line. If the positive pressure is greater than the weight of the oil in the line it can back up right into the turbo.
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
Did you take in account for the filter's oil capacity? Just wondering. Like I said if my block hadn't been painted I would have drilled and tapped it. Or if my oil pan didn't have holes in it I would have used it like normal. I like the idea of the block drain, but I would like to know more about the structure of the block before cutting it all up...The point is I figured out what oil lines are from VW on stock turbo. Where it drains really doesn't matter to me at this point. If you need to make a feed or return line for stock fittings look above I am positive it is correct.