I originally bought this transaxle back in the mid-90's. "Pro-Street" with all the goodies; welded 3&4'th, bunch of hardened stuff, super diff, reinforced aluminum side plate, all that Jazz. The only changes this time around were to replace the bad bearing, check out the rest, change the R&P to a 3:88 and button it up. They also replaced all of the fasteners and painted it so it looks like new (and it is, too!)
It was shipped in a semi-triple-wall corrugated box which was designed to be shipped horizontally. Fine, but it got delivered on-end, sitting on the bell housing. This was probably due to most of the weight being towards the bell-housing end. Fortunately, that end had additional cardboard installed and semi-protection for the input shaft in case it was set on that end, so no harm. (and the rest of the box arrived in OK shape). Could it be better? Sure, but at what additional cost? This one made it 3,000 miles OK and another one shipping 300 miles with an un-caring shipper might not do so well......who knows? I added 28 pounds of shipping box to it when it left me, and that cost about $100 one-way to ship.
The engine is a 2,110 with 40mm Dells, all the usual goodies, an Engle 120 cam and a Berg extractor system (they hang down a bit in the rear, but perform well). It's mostly set up for mid-range torque and performs pretty well up to about 6 grand but really nice between 2,500 and 4,500 rpm.
Spent about an hour getting my Berg shifter back in last night too no avail......Installs OK and I can find 4 gears but the reverse lock-out button isn't doing anything with the gate tab so I finally gave up and watched Nova. I remember having trouble with this originally so just have to figure it out one more time. OCD now, will pay off with many years of easy shifting in the future....and I'm really good at being OCD.
It's also amazing how nicely things go when you get the right parts. I spent a couple of evenings trying to figure out why, after I re-assembled my rear brake drums with new wheel cylinders, the silly drums wouldn't go on. Finally measured the dimensions of the new wheel cylinders and found them to be slightly different than the old ones. Epiphanic moments ensued, I checked the box and found I had received cylinders for a '54-'67 beetle (with the narrower brake shoes) and mine is the later with wider shoes. D...U...H........
Got some new cylinders in a day from Bug City (those guys are great!) and they went in in about 10 minutes per wheel - including reinstalling everything else. I'll get to pressure bleeding them today, some time. Right now, I'm off to do my volunteer work as a Master Gardener for the Community Harvest Project.
Stay tuned. I've been taking pictures of the suspension mods but they don't show much.