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Yes, since that's a tautology. Unless you mean "would additional seats fit in a vehicle without taking the original seats out first", in which case it would be a pretty tight fit, but you might be able to get them in the back. There isn't much room in the "trunk" (which in a '74 beetle is actually in the front), and I doubt you could get them in there.
Well, the engine in a 1974 vw Beetle is in the back of the car. So the brake fluid in front or the back to the left of the right.
Mexican spec.
It's on the front of the transmission. VW Joe! Have a Great Day
No.
Right side, front of motor. Front of car 3-1 4-2 Rear of car
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It is located under the front hood on the driver's side. It is up close to the dash on the driver's side. There will be a little holder for it with a strap holding it down.
I wouldn't. You are talking about a MAJOR engineering project and, if you don't do it exactly right, the car will be unsafe. My recommendation is to search Craigslist for a 1969-later Bug that needs an engine and transmission, and put the ones from your car in it.
There are two versions of the Super Beetle, one made in 1971 and 1972, the other in 1973, 1974 and 1975. All of them have a louvered front apron (the piece of sheetmetal below the trunk lid, behind the front bumper) and the spare tire lays flat in the trunk. All Standard Beetles had the front tire standing up in front of the gas tank. The 1973-75 Supers also have a curved windshield.
Well...it depends. A Regular Beetle (flat windshield, no slots in the apron under the front bumper, spare tire upright, steel dashboard) has no springs in either end of the suspension. A Super Beetle (curved windshield, slots in the front apron, spare tire lying flat, plastic dashboard) has McPherson Strut front suspension with springs around the shocks, but no springs in the rear suspension.
Underneath the left, front, directly behind the brake pedal. Bentley Service Manual (Orange one) shows you how.