Running out of jumping around I can do. Now, I have to mount the E-brake cables, then install the springs so I can support the car by the axle so I can adjust pinion angle and bolt down the Watts linkage at ride height, as it is the only thing in the rear suspension with bushings besides the shocks.
First, the cables. After some consternation on the left side due to the locknuts on the cables being rusted solid, I ended up just shoving it in there with the hope that there's little chance it will actually fall out because of how snug the fit is. By the time I was done doing that, my tablet was charged enough to take pics, so I only took pics of the passenger side.
First, we use a Dremel to cut a notch out of the VW cable mount:
Then install the cable. Simple.
THIS is why the calipers are mounted at such an odd angle. It is necessary for the Mazda cables to reach.
Next, the springs go in, and the shocks get bolted in after searching for the hardware, and the pinion angle is set and the upper link locked down, and then the trophy shot after installing the driveshaft:
Bolted in with factory hardware, too. Either the flange had an existing ring on the backside that matched up with the Mazda square nuts perfectly, or the machinist cut an existing taper down flat to the correct register. Would give even odds either way. Driveshaft bolts up like stock and has plenty of plunge.
This image looked a lot better in the preview. What it is supposed to show is that the driveshaft is now centered in the tunnel, which means it no longer rubs on the exhaust at full droop (despite the lower pinion offset) and the pinion flange will no longer rub the right side of the tunnel. Which the lower pinion offset would prevent anyway. Hopefully this means no more horrible scraping noises when hitting bumps at speed.
Now, to put the Watts together. First I had to take the link off the car, which ended up requiring that I jack the car off of the rearend for clearance reasons as well as pry the rearend over to clear the exhaust. Then, I drove in the locator bushing I made to mate the 18mm ID bushing to the 16mm OD stud I am using:
Putting this back in took a solid hour of wrestling and cursing. And, for some reason, I had Julie Brown's "The Homecoming Queen's Got a Gun" stuck in my head the whole time.
Now that this song is stuck in your (good) ear too, I'll elaborate. First I had to pop the brace on. Then I had to shove the axle over to the left with one prybar while finagling the bellcrank on over the stud while trying to clear the floor and the exhaust. Then, and this is the hard part, I could NOT get the upper link on it. Part of what was fighting me was the brace kept getting in the way. After a LONG while of hammering this and prying that, something went "duh!" and it all fell into place, just like that.
This is the point where I discovered that the 12x1.5 nuts that belonged to the bellcrank were missing. I should have had three of them, two from the original setup and a third from the right side Watts pivot that I didn't use because I needed a longer bolt and I used something from a box of excess Honda V6 fasteners. I tore the Batcave apart looking for them. I put the casters on the car dollies that I bought a long time ago. I put away some of the stuff on the red and gray parts shelf and broke up the leftover boxes. (The red and gray parts shelf looks kinda like the RX-7 that won PR at the Nationals in '08-ish, but loose parts boxes just seem to gravitate to it) I cleaned and organized and never did find those damn nuts. So it looks like I will be buying some tomorrow. I decided, well, time to put fluid in the rearend. That is when I discovered that the fill plug needs a 3/8" Allen and all I have is metric. And then my bottle of camper gas ran out and my heater shut off.
Yep, looks like I am buying some nuts, an Allen wrench, and another bottle of camper gas tomorrow. Maybe I'll remember to charge the tablet overnight, too.