New brake pipes - recommendations ?
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Good. You'll find installation is easier using copper or Kunifer line, you'll need to bend them about to install them, far easier straightening them out again in situ than steel tube. No doubt the factory installed the front to rear line and the one across the bulkhead to the bare shell before anything was in the way.
It's a copper nickel alloy,
http://www.bennetts.com/brake-tools/kun ... 13657-.php
I struggled with cheap flaring tools for years, they really are a waste of money.
http://www.bennetts.com/brake-tools/kun ... 13657-.php
I struggled with cheap flaring tools for years, they really are a waste of money.
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- Location: Cornwall
well anything that is alternativly compressed and allowed to expand heats up so the brake fluid will get warmer
and so will the rubber cups in the cylinders
and the cars need to work in alaska and arizona
brake fluid doesn't compress very much so it won't heat up much (well not like a gas anyway) but as everything does to some extent.....mmmm
but granted you could be onto a thing there.
in fact you probably are
brakes also heat up
copper being copper(alloy) its quite good at takeing that heat from the fluid and spreading it a long way so the brake fluid will get hot and the copper expands. flexis will be ok but the copper runs along the car will get longer when warm and they usually just run in rubber lined D clamps and rubber hgrohmhets. (is there an h in gromets?)
brake fluid is also a water magnet.
Any dissolved water boils out when hot and makes for a spongy peddle
steam is very good at tranfering heat enegrey to places where you would't expect
so i was thinking......(granted thats often a bad thing)
Just like you should always allow for expansion in your exhaust (rubber doughnuts, mounts a little too far back when welded to the car look correct when exhaust is hot etc) you should in other metal pipe-age
if you agree to a combo of the two i'll give ya 50p
either way factory paid money to some fella to come up with the idea. extra 6 inches of pipe per car and your selling 100,000 of em
it all adds up
so it should be there again when replaced
Dave
and so will the rubber cups in the cylinders
and the cars need to work in alaska and arizona
brake fluid doesn't compress very much so it won't heat up much (well not like a gas anyway) but as everything does to some extent.....mmmm
but granted you could be onto a thing there.
in fact you probably are
brakes also heat up
copper being copper(alloy) its quite good at takeing that heat from the fluid and spreading it a long way so the brake fluid will get hot and the copper expands. flexis will be ok but the copper runs along the car will get longer when warm and they usually just run in rubber lined D clamps and rubber hgrohmhets. (is there an h in gromets?)
brake fluid is also a water magnet.
Any dissolved water boils out when hot and makes for a spongy peddle
steam is very good at tranfering heat enegrey to places where you would't expect
so i was thinking......(granted thats often a bad thing)
Just like you should always allow for expansion in your exhaust (rubber doughnuts, mounts a little too far back when welded to the car look correct when exhaust is hot etc) you should in other metal pipe-age
if you agree to a combo of the two i'll give ya 50p
either way factory paid money to some fella to come up with the idea. extra 6 inches of pipe per car and your selling 100,000 of em
it all adds up
so it should be there again when replaced
Dave
The Greater Knapweed near the Mugwort by the Buckthorn tree is dying
hang onClivey wrote:Helix's more particularly there to stop the pipes fatigue fracturing from vibration.
Dave, you sure brake fluid expands with heat? Put your brakes on with a blow torch?
you don't want the pipe to fracture
so you make a spring in it?????
i.e more pipe to fracture and coiled in a way that promotes vibration at a predetermined harmonic based on material, coil size and some other stuff i can't remeber
i smell fish and its dog eggs for supper all round
dave
The Greater Knapweed near the Mugwort by the Buckthorn tree is dying
hey used to have a bit of fun when i was teach
split class into groups
bunsen burner on ferocious setting
give each kid an equal length and diameter rod of material
make sure the truely deserving kids got the copper
make sure the rest got glass or wood bakelite etc
have a copetition to see who could keep their rod in the flame the longest
smashing
think they term that bulling now
to me it was a lesson that needed teaching
glass you get some warning
copper goes ok to sore hand in seconds
heheheheheheh
they used to get their own back
filled me bag and jacket pockets with lead shot
and nicked me wallet and fags
obviously couldn't run after them when i weighed 95 stone
conduction and density taught and learned to great effect
they never filled me jacket with feathers or polystyrene
Dave
split class into groups
bunsen burner on ferocious setting
give each kid an equal length and diameter rod of material
make sure the truely deserving kids got the copper
make sure the rest got glass or wood bakelite etc
have a copetition to see who could keep their rod in the flame the longest
smashing
think they term that bulling now
to me it was a lesson that needed teaching
glass you get some warning
copper goes ok to sore hand in seconds
heheheheheheh
they used to get their own back
filled me bag and jacket pockets with lead shot
and nicked me wallet and fags
obviously couldn't run after them when i weighed 95 stone
conduction and density taught and learned to great effect
they never filled me jacket with feathers or polystyrene
Dave
The Greater Knapweed near the Mugwort by the Buckthorn tree is dying