Hey Martin
It's all a matter of making sure the mag seats into the dizzy drive enough....but not too much so as to loose all the drive end float.If you use the standard distributor clamp on some mags it will pull the base of the mag out of the drive ( by the thickness of the clamp) and risk not seating properly which can raise two problems 1.the dizzy drive will chatter as the end float of the drive is massively increased and will damage the brass gear (why most people blame mags for damaging gears) and 2.the mag drive key can slip out of the drive and damage both and of course your timing/engine!
There's is a special clamp for mags that vw made for the industrial engine which goes around the base of the mag without being sandwiched between the mag and the case but I've also used mags that require a standard vw dizzy clamp so the only way to be sure is to measure everything i.e. the length of mag verses the dizzy you're removing.
Of course the best way is to fit it and set the end float (with the factory shims) on the drizzy drive before you drop the crank in when building the engine.....this is always the first job I do when assembling any motor and make sure the clamp etc is all flat with no gaps to the case...like the cheapo chrome ones! How you set the dizzy drive endfloat accurately with the case already assembled is a mystery but people still do it!
Mags are usually loose in the case so a support bracket is advisable which can double as a clamp aswell but again check the mag is not bottoming out on the drive /brass gear or both will wear prematurely and make sure the support is tight enough to stop the mag from rotating and altering your timing as some/most aftermarket supports will do up tight but not really clamp/hold the mag tight enough so mods are required.......other than that it's easy!!
Enjoy they're worth it.......
Ian