alternator bracket x petrol pump spacer

Early Bay Forum

Help Support Early Bay Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

frenchi

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 27, 2013
Messages
49
Reaction score
0
hi everyone more help needed can any one send a pic of bracket that goes on alternator adjuster /,also got petrol pump but i think it needs a spacer any help on this pic even the thickness i need will try to make many thanks
 

Attachments

  • IMG_5459.jpg
    IMG_5459.jpg
    71 KB · Views: 0
  • IMG_5461.jpg
    IMG_5461.jpg
    52.6 KB · Views: 0
Ooh type 4 engine, yes there is a spacer and they should be splined head bolts if I remember correctly. Alternator bracket is slightly curved with a 90deg on end where it bolts to block. Looks like a wanted ad then.
 
Ooh type 4 engine, yes there is a spacer and they should be splined head bolts if I remember correctly. Alternator bracket is slightly curved with a 90deg on end where it bolts to block. Looks like a wanted ad then.
Glad you was paying attention then Dav, as that don’t look nuffink like the type 4 that I got hidden under a bench in my garage.
if you need type 4 parts and nobody comes good on here, the LateBay is always a good shout for a wanted ad.

Ozziedog,,,,,,,, im going out to count my spacers now :)
 
There are two brackets for an alternator on a VW Type 4 style air-cooled engine.

The pivot bracket attaches to the bottom of the engine's cooling-fan housing

The curved, alternator V-belt-tension adjustment bracket, attaches to the top of the engine's cooling-fan housing and the right-hand exhaust heat exchanger.

I cannot remember for sure whether the mechanical fuel pump has a spacer on a VW Type 4 style air-cooled engine, but I don't remember removing one from either of mine.
 
I have the 2 types of brackets for the alternator and as above I don't think the pump has a Spacer
Photo later
 
That's pretty much as I remember it too! Some of the alternator brackets get horribly rusty with little structural integrity.

With these Type 4 engines, one often finds that certain essential components are commonly missing, which typically include the non-return air-flaps & covers, between the engine cooling-fan housing and the exhaust heat-exchangers, plus the left-hand exhaust heat-exchanger & silencer support bracket.

 
VW part # 021-127-303A

Back in the early-to-mid 1990s, I worked on three or four 1972~79 VW 17/18/2000 Type 2 engines (two of which were my own) with twin Solex carburettors & mechanical fuel pump close to the flywheel, but none of them had this intermediate spacer, so far as I can recall.

https://www.justkampers.com/0211273...00cc-1800cc-and-2000cc-aircooled-engines.html

https://www.justkampers.com/0211273...5-1700-1800-and-2000cc-aircooled-engines.html

https://www.csp-shop.com/en/engine/fuel-pump-flange-127-303-021a-31148a.html

https://www.csp-shop.com/en/engine/fuel-pump-push-rod-127-307-021a-27357a.html

https://www.bbt4vw.com/en/catalogue...ke /fuel-pomp-flange/fuel-pump-flange-type-4/

I wonder if people shortened the fuel-pump pushrod [said to be of 139•8 mm standard length], to compensate for the lack of this phenolic-resin spacer!?! I did something similar, when I reduced the thickness of the fuel-pump spacer cum guide-tube by 6•0 mm, in order to retain the upright "dynamo-style" fuel pump when retro-fitting an alternator, to my family's 1973 VW 1600 Type 2, AD-Series engine.
 

Latest posts

Top