When I bought my passat, it was slammed to an inch off the ground. the owner blamed the oil leak on a bad valve cover gasket (common, easily repaired problem) but I soon figured out the oil pan slammed into the pavement any time you bottomed out...which was a lot.
one day I hit a speed bump going WAY too fast, and punched a hole in the pan...I returned the car to factory ride height and patched this hole.
the previous patch was made of muffler patch, covered with truck bed liner. it held for about a month, and slowly started to drip. the drip was slow, but I couldn't live knowing it was there, so today I patched it again.
just because its a fine German car, doesn't mean its immune to redneck engineering.
my car has the 1.8 turbo, which has an aluminum oil pan (like most newer cars) and the muffler patch didn't like the aluminum, and failed. the epoxy I bought this time around is meant for aluminum. even though I demonstrate this on my car, it should be the same on all cars.
previous patch-
started by draining the oil. do this while the engine is hot, and it will take less time for all the oil to drip out. I used a paint scraper to scrape off the old patch.
and THIS is why you don't lower your car without putting in a solid skid plate.
I used Brakleen to clean any oil off of the surface I was going to mount the new patch, and wiped away the brakleen with a shop rag. I put some of the epoxy on a piece of the cardboard packaging, and pressed that against the leaky area. the cardboard was only to hold the epoxy in place while it set, after it set the cardboard was useless...but its epoxied to the bottom of the car. over time, the combination of rain, oil, wind, road salt and whatever else passes under the car will destroy the cardboard, but the epoxy should last.
after the set time specified on the epoxy packaging, I put new oil in the car (you wouldn't put old oil back in your car right...RIGHT!?) and checked for leaks.
bonus guide-hoodrat crush washer
the crush washer was shot, and I didn't have a spare laying around...so I used an old trick to seal the drain plug. I have used teflon tape in the past to substitute a crush washer, but I wanted to try the RTV trick.
I cleaned the base of the drain plug using Brakleen, and applied a bead of RTV around the base of the bolt. after it dried, I torqued it as normal.
Spoiler
old crush washer
final product