Thanks for everyone's comments, directives and suggestions. All appreciated. Helps to always have extra data before making a hard decision.
Installed the axles to the transaxle using two (2) shims on each side (wouldn't take more) before tapping in the pins to hold the axles in place. Will safety wire in place at a later point in time.
I have been mulling the oil seal and flinger situation for several weeks now. Issue number one was the correct placement of the oil seals on the inside of the bearing hub. The question was which way did the seal face as the two sets of hubs I had disassembled had the seals open to the side of the yoke. But most of you said it should be the other way around. So I bought two new seals, removed the ones I had installed "incorrectly" and replaced them with new seals with the metal cap facing the yoke.
THEN my friend Bruce emails me from Mexico to let me know that he is rebuilding his Europa TC rear bearing hubs and his oil seals were also installed with the open end of the seal towards the yoke and no flingers. OK then, WTF......
My friend Chris came over today with his Elan and we bled his clutch to remove some air bubbles and then we go thru all the postings on this subject of oil seals and flingers as well and reread Bruce's email. And here is the ah-ha moment...... I took a magnifying glass to the engineering drawing of the hub that is in the shop manual and low and behold it shows the seal with the open end towards the yoke. For those that have engineering backgrounds or formal training in mechanical drawing will note that a darker solid line against a lighter drawn line is showing something different. If you look very closely a the drawing in the shop manual it shows the seal open towards the yoke.
Well, I have already installed the new seals with the metal cap the other way around. Chris and I spend an hour doing measurement and take off's to determine if the seal is mounted in reverse will it still be on the collar of the axle. The answer is yes. Then we have another conversation regarding in the flingers. My are used and don't have a tight fit. Using Loctite bearing sealer might hold them in place, but no guarantee. With the thought that the flingers might be rotating around the axle collar and bouncing against the outside edge of the rubber seal would not be a good idea. The flingers come off.
JB, no worries, the metal spacer is inside between the two bearings.
We bolt on the hubs to the correct swing arms, grease everything nicely to insure a smooth fit of the bearings and seals and mount a bearing collar behind the yoke with threaded studs attached to a metal plate that has a hole in the middle. Out comes my trusty air ratchet wrench and slowly tighten each stud in succession to pull the hub onto the stub axle.
Chris had to go but I was on a roll and wanted to get the suspension in place. Installed the shocks and lower control arms. The big question here is my original install had these spacers on the lower hub bolt to align the shock and control arm. I read the shop manual again as it didn't show any spacers in the drawings. Mmmmmm...what is up with this? After a couple of different configurations I decide the small spacer needs to go next to the outside of the hub so the shock is horizontal when compressed. Is this correct?
Everything is placed but not bolted down until I get more data and research further. By the way, the question about using Loctite on the axle where the bearing are located was because the shop manual suggest you do this. I scratched my head at this and had Chris read the manual, he thought the same. Didn't make sense which is why I asked the question to everyone looking over my shoulder on this site.
Lots of little decisions, I wonder how many correct...... Looking forward to comments