Heavy Duty high quality vise grips on each piece
Amen Brother.I'ma start checking parts cars from now on for crisp clean MC to Cali hose hard brake lines with nice nuts. (don't slam me with that nice nuts comment - thanky)I saw in an archived thread somewhere a while back where a guy got them New from VW, and said they were not that terribly expensive. However he didn't disclose part numbers or prices.Anyone able to get them numbers / costs ?
It might mean sourcing new (used) pre-bent lines from another car - or buying a length of new bubble flared end brake line and bending it to fit from MC to caliper hose.
If you mechanic get's/has the kit for making bubble flares he may either be able to save the line you have, or at worst case he can make up a new one from a roll of line.. However if need be, most autoparts places will have the pre made bubble flare line as most everything is using it now days.. I'm having a brain fart at the moment and can;t remeber which fitting you need though.. Barron will probably know though...On another note, If I understand you right your mechanic is making a house call.. If he does you right make sure you buy him a beer! It seems now a days most mech's won't leave their shop for no one.. Not even the old lady next door.. Major props to him for willing to!
Thinking its 8mm x 1mm on the front line fittings. But check that. Read at a couple of places, but going by memory at this minute ... that it is a 10mm instead of an 8. Feel this may be correct due to having to use a 10mm wrench on the rear lines ... also it fitting on the non-buggered one in the front.You have option of re-using the boogered nuts and leaving the line alone. Wrench Size = vise grips.Very difficult with them ... even though that was the final solution. The front ones (line and hose) are connected through a holding bracket welded to the fender well ... that has side walls to it that restricts getting a firm grip on the hose side. With that, even though it is partially held, the line side, with the 10mm fiting, wants to just spin and ultimately got stripped of the hexigon part. I am planning on using my dremal to cut off the shoulders of this bracket so that, god forbid, if I ever have to do this again, they won't be in the way.Plain Rotors should be fairly inexpensive.And all the rest is new down there, heck why not.Re-thinking replacement entirely. Just got one of the drums off on the rear, and while showing equal amount of 'lip' as on the front discs, the 'old' pads/shoes all have LOTS of wear left ... with the front even with the new pads on the rebuilt Kelsey-Hayes calipers. So I'm thinking of just putting on the new calipers, wheel cylinders, reinstalling the now clean MC and reservoir, new hoses ... in other words, all the stuff that is already here ... cleaning up, bleeding new fluid ... and letting it go as is. Heck, it'll likely outlive me even....Go gettem Doon !
I'ma start checking parts cars from now on for crisp clean MC to Caliper hose hard brake lines with nice nuts. (don't slam me with that nice nuts comment - thanky)
Keep the grommet around the old hose, that holds it to the strut bracket,.. mine didn't come with one.[size=11pt]New hoses I got did not either ... so cut the old ones on one side with razor and slipped onto them ... and the on to the brackets. Feel certain they'll be there for another many years.[/size] Did your mechanic buy a new short piece with the ends and flares already on it?.. or did he reuse the banged-up line nuts and make his own?Got pre-made one from Carquest ... and it did not work ... which was part of my long suffered struggling. Presumed he knew what he was doing ... other than raping my wallet for a simple home visit to crack the caliper hose unions . ANd then, another rape with the cost of this insufficient metal hose.After trying for about a couple of hours trying to get it to work, took it completely off and studied it next to the 'buggered' up one I did. Everything looked A-OK ... until I noticed at the end of the old fittings, a very small (1/32nd) non-threaded part of the tube ... whereas the new one he created was threaded all the way to the end of the fitting.Knowing where he gets his parts, I visited there and questioned them; and sure enough, they sold the bad one to him. So the owner let me pick out the one needed and let me go with no cost to me. At home shaped it to match the old one ... put it on ... and worked immediately.This was not an oversight ... IMO. Why ... because I had left the old one with him, and this fact that he picked out an incorrect version tells me he did not even take the time to take the old one with him for comparision ... which again, is not a surprise to me relative to his so called 'expertise' regarding VWs.Air heads maybe ... but not water cooled.So the pre-fabbed hose from CQ was in the vicinity of 5.00 ... and his time at the house breaking the seized hose connections, of about 10 minutes ... both charges of 30.00 each ... total of 60.00.Ain't life with these kind of 'experts' a KITA.....?Motto ... never again will I put a foot across his threshold. Cold day in ....... Will use a friends car-dolly and take it to the 'big city' where there is a bonafied 40 year experienced mechanic ... along with the fact the shop itself has been there for 50 odd years. Real easy to find those short ones at NAPA,.. new lines to the rear are better off being made so you don't have to splice two 5 or 6ft pieces,.. but that's only if you destroy the rear metal lines or find a spot in the line that verry corroded.