Sorry man, all I do is order one up from my supplier, usually Worldpac, and they would usually have one in their warehouse here in STL, so I would have it in my hand in a couple hours or if I needed it right away I'd send one of our porters down to get it and I would have it in my hand in 20 minutes.
I've never gotten a Bosch reman starter that was wrong. *shrug* If the numbers I provided are wrong, I apologize. Sometimes the pictures in the part lookup are incorrect, but the numbers are correct, and the part in the box is correct.
FWIW, often times the aftermarket reman programs will consolidate several replacement numbers into one part. This can add to the confusion. The reason this happens is that when Bosch made the starter for Volkswagen, they were making thousands of them for a specific application, and they negotiated the lowest price possible. Down to the penny.
So engine A may require a 1.4kw motor, engine B which is mostly the same but maybe a higher performance version with higher compression may require a 1.5kw motor. The manufacturer (Volkswagen, Chrysler, whoever) will be trying to get the best price possible, and the difference in price between the 1.4 and 1.5kw versions may be 4 cents, due to the only difference being a few extra windings of copper wire inside the armature. The manufacturer does not want to pay an extra 4 cents for something they do not need because over the course of all the starters they expect to buy it adds up.
However, when Bosch rebuilds the starters, they may decide that it is of no value to deal with two different numbers, so they just rebuild them for both applications with the 1.5kw motor.
An example of this exact thing happening: Volkswagen Transporters. The late Type 4 engine powered T2s and the early Type 4 engine powered T3s (Vanagons) used the same engine. But, the T3 relocated the battery to the front of the van above the right front wheel, whereas the T2 had the battery in the right rear corner, much closer to the starter. So the T3 needed a larger battery cable, which meant they put a long collar on the end of the cable which required a longer stud on the starter solenoid. Two different starters by part number, but in the Bosch reman line, they realized that the earlier vans could use the long stud starter just fine, they'd just have an extra cm of stud on there. So two part numbers became one.