Syncro 4&4 Discussion and Q&A last answered over 2 years ago.
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My guess is the slot's one of the points used for injection of cavity wax on the assembly line. Should certainly be kept covered IMO to reduce the amount of moisture-retaining sh1te finding it way into the sill.
Syncrosport (taking a break as of summer 2024)
Volkswagen Transporter, reloaded.
Nice idea but I think the sill might need to be clear to serve as a drain point for water entering elsewhere, depending on the body type. I wouldn't want to risk trapping any water anyway. Also not great if any repairs are needed later. Better just to clean it out real well and apply a decent preferably non-tacky cavity wax. I find the dinitrol 3125 a bit tacky (so will tend to told onto dirt a bit), so I'm on the look-out for something else. According to some, VW used the Valvoline Tectyl range, but I've not found definitive info on exactly which ones, plus they're a bit hard to obtain in retail type packaging.
Syncrosport (taking a break as of summer 2024)
Volkswagen Transporter, reloaded.
syncroandy wrote:Nice idea but I think the sill might need to be clear to serve as a drain point for water entering elsewhere, depending on the body type. I wouldn't want to risk trapping any water anyway. Also not great if any repairs are needed later. Better just to clean it out real well and apply a decent preferably non-tacky cavity wax. I find the dinitrol 3125 a bit tacky (so will tend to told onto dirt a bit), so I'm on the look-out for something else. According to some, VW used the Valvoline Tectyl range, but I've not found definitive info on exactly which ones, plus they're a bit hard to obtain in retail type packaging.
Maybe lanolin the kiwi offroaders swear by it and you don't see many rusty sheep