Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > Rear brake line replacement - Any contacts? |
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Pawl Member Since: 07 Nov 2017 Location: West Midlands Posts: 689 |
I presume you mean copper - nickel pipe rather than pure copper ?
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30th Jun 2023 1:37pm |
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AnotherMutley Member Since: 16 Jan 2017 Location: Kent Posts: 400 |
What about Glenrands? |
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30th Jun 2023 1:40pm |
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Flashman Member Since: 05 Jun 2011 Location: Windsor & Brentwood Posts: 1228 |
Yep, copper-nickel or what variant brake lines are made of. Not interested in OEM that will only corrode again.
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30th Jun 2023 1:43pm |
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dhallworth Member Since: 10 Oct 2011 Location: Glasgow Posts: 3076 |
I did this job recently on a friends TDV8. It's not as bad a job as you'd think.
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30th Jun 2023 2:03pm |
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Ramblin Man Member Since: 05 Apr 2022 Location: Southsea Posts: 275 |
Out of curiosity; does anyone know of a reason why braided brake lines can’t be used ?
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30th Jun 2023 3:24pm |
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Pawl Member Since: 07 Nov 2017 Location: West Midlands Posts: 689 |
Flexi hose (braided etc) expand under pressure.
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30th Jun 2023 9:45pm |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
I always thought that too, until we had to re-line one of the rally cars in a bit of an emergency and ended up using full braided line throughout. You couldn't tell the difference between hard line and the braided stuff, both were rock solid. Way more solid than any normal car's system feels with a vacuum booster etc. I still wouldn't necessarily choose it as my first option but it really isn't poor performing. |
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1st Jul 2023 6:18pm |
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Pawl Member Since: 07 Nov 2017 Location: West Midlands Posts: 689 |
I think braided hose has probably improved over the years, but it's still a fundamental that anything that can flex will flex / expand under high pressure.
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1st Jul 2023 9:39pm |
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bigbo Member Since: 07 Jul 2014 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 579 |
Interesting, I fitted similar hoses to our MG and I noticed a difference as the pedal felt a little firmer with more feedback over the OE flexible hoses.
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2nd Jul 2023 12:03am |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3206 |
Teflon lined stainless steel braided hoses are not like OE rubber and textile flexible hoses. An issue for the MOT would be if they are legal for road use as brake fluid is highly flammable. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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2nd Jul 2023 10:22am |
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Tinman Member Since: 22 Mar 2017 Location: kent Posts: 1188 |
Freeway on the Isle of Sheppy is not too far from you and don`t need to take the subframe off. 2017 SDV8 4.4 silicon silver AB
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2nd Jul 2023 11:57am |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
Oh for sure. I probably wouldn't willingly replace the lines on a full road car with it (we were routing the lines through the car) as it would be bloody expensive. For us we had a reel and a bunch of fittings sitting there at 11pm so as they say, it was the right solution at the right time for the right people! Where I was coming from with the thoughts here was in relation to the back end where on most cars (I've never had to replace lines on either of my previous L322's) it's an utter PITA to route hard line through the subframe/tank etc, and that replacing the hard line with braided flex up and over that section may save a lot of arse. Even if it was more expensive, for the time and effort/swearing saved it may be a trade off worth considering. On the Impreza I've got a full set of OEM rear lines and connector blocks waiting to go on while I've got the tank and subframe dropped as a preventative measure. If they blew without me doing the tank etc already I'd be inclined to either re-route and/or use the flexi. It's an interesting point @JayGee on the legality of them. I've never seen any issue with braided lines going through an MOT (pretty much all my cars have had them fitted over the last 20 years) and there's nothing from what I could see in the MOT regulations that it could fail under. With regard the fire resistance, they're going to be better than rubber line, and braided line is preferable in race cars to rubber due to its fireproofness. Obviously you're comparing braided to kunifer etc but full fuel systems are made with this stuff so I don't really think it's an issue. Not having a jab at you though, and I'm happy to be proven wrong if I've missed something! |
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2nd Jul 2023 6:06pm |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3206 |
There is no problem replacing the existing flexi lines with braided as it's a like for like situation but replacing the hard lines with braided / flexi lines is another matter. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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2nd Jul 2023 8:07pm |
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Gremlin500 Member Since: 11 Mar 2022 Location: Newcastle, UK Posts: 1433 |
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2nd Jul 2023 9:02pm |
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