I like fatmobiles idea about using custom rubber hose or something. You could even carefully
wrap silicon tape around a fuel line to make a rubber cushion, pia, but custom fit.
For me, rubber hose or silicone tape and zip ties comes to mind (I'm such a cheapskate)

Looking at the ALH fuel pipes, they only use 2 sets of 2-line rubber clamps, located about in
the middle of the length of the pipe.
https://www.amazon.com/Diesel-Injector-Lines-Volkswagen-1989-2004/dp/B08Y5YRHY1Also, just a thought, the extra rubber clamps on the IDI pipes may be mostly for holding the
4-pipe assembly in position for removal and installation.
Edit: ChatGPT disagrees-
Q: Are the rubber securing clamps on diesel (IDI) injection metal lines put there to prevent the lines from cracking or just to hold the pipes together when removing them?
A:On IDI diesel engines, the rubber-lined securing clamps on the steel injection lines are there primarily to prevent cracking and failure, not just to keep the lines together during removal.
What those clamps actually do
1. Control vibration and resonance (main purpose)
Injection lines see very high pressure pulses (often 1,500–3,000+ psi).
Each injection event sends a sharp pressure wave through the steel line.
Without restraints, the line can resonate and flex at specific RPM ranges.
That cyclic flexing leads to work-hardening and fatigue cracks, usually right near bends or fittings.
The rubber in the clamp:
Damps vibration
Prevents metal-to-metal contact
Reduces stress concentrations
2. Maintain correct relative positioning
The lines are shaped and spaced very deliberately.
Clamps keep them from touching each other or the engine, which would:
Transmit vibration
Wear through the line over time
Create noise and fatigue points
3. Secondary benefit during service
Yes, they do help keep the lines grouped when removing/installing them,
But that’s a convenience side effect — not the design reason.
Important service notes (very relevant on IDIs)
Do not omit the clamps when reinstalling lines.
Do not substitute solid clamps (rubber isolation matters).
Do not mix up line positions — even slight reshaping can preload stress.
If a line has been bent “just a little,” it’s already compromised.
On many IDI engines (Ford 6.9/7.3, VW IDI, Mercedes OM-series, etc.), running without the proper clamps will eventually cause a line to crack, sometimes surprisingly quickly.
Bottom line
➡️ They are there to prevent vibration-induced fatigue and cracking.
Holding the pipes together during removal is incidental, not the purpose.