Is brake line flaring difficult?


Yeah, if the cut is uneven, you won’t get good results. I say square because I’m used to working construction. Perpendicular is a good term to describe it.

I’ve gone to the Nickel/Copper line, easy to bend even without tools and never rusts. Be careful buying it cheap online because sometimes it’s copper coated steel. Real Ni/Copp line is non-magnetic. I buy stainless steel fittings for it. Rust is a big problem here. Not so much in AZ though.

Soft lines are sometimes a little difficult to flare in those cheap tools, I had to clamp it really tight and it would often deform the line a little, I’d have to file a little of where the line pressed into the grooves so the nut would slide up to the flare. The tools like Bobby suggested and the hydraulic and turret tools have smooth dies and it’s not a problem
 
and get a flaring tool with the proper flare angle. they make different flare angles for different things so you might flare, say a 35 degree flare but your vehicles is 40 degrees. those are not the actual numbers but make sure its an automotive brake flaring tool so its right. brakes use a different angle than some other lines do
 
I've done dozens of flares with the Titan tool. Cutter and reamer from home depot. Mostly nicopp, generally on the bench with the block in a vise. It's piss easy.

When I was learning, the two problems I had were:

1. Use die lube, but only a little bit. Don't glom it on there and leave it.

2. Don't ever crank the wrench at the stop. You want the last tightening movement to be smooth.

Lately I've been fixing heat-pump flares with a "nice" eccentric ratcheting tool, and in general I think brakes are "easier" not because you're doing anything different, but because high-pressure single-flares need to be absolutely perfect. Double-flared connections are a lot more forgiving.
 
The tool I bought from Napa over 40 years ago looks like this and works fine. I agree that it's important to get a clean cut on the line and file off any burrs before flaring. Practice a few times and go for it. Remember to put the fitting on the line- facing the right way- before you start.
View attachment 139339


this is good if you dont have to make brake lines very often and are on the bench.

only thing i used for 30 years....have a handful of them laying around..


the 3/16 nipple usually busts off after about 20 or 30 uses....which could be a week for me some years...but i was always able to get the dies and had a herd of them up until the mid 2000s.



but ..

making a flare in a wheel well or the frame rail behind the tank is not a thing it can do...

what i listed above...is a god send in regards to that.

i had several turret hydro units...they are worth their weight just in time saved.. but hard to replace because they disappear quickly in the field.
 
But leaving the nuts off is how you get a perfect flare every time! :icon_twisted:
Extra points if you get two nuts installed or one backwards... not that I would know anything about that... I've installed swagelok fittings a few times and had two nuts on the tubing many times though...
 
this is good if you dont have to make brake lines very often and are on the bench.

only thing i used for 30 years....have a handful of them laying around..


the 3/16 nipple usually busts off after about 20 or 30 uses....which could be a week for me some years...but i was always able to get the dies and had a herd of them up until the mid 2000s.



but ..

making a flare in a wheel well or the frame rail behind the tank is not a thing it can do...

what i listed above...is a god send in regards to that.

i had several turret hydro units...they are worth their weight just in time saved.. but hard to replace because they disappear quickly in the field.
When I bought the kit I was a mechanic in NH, with all the road salt I made a lot of brake lines. All the nipples are still original.
 
When I bought the kit I was a mechanic in NH, with all the road salt I made a lot of brake lines. All the nipples are still original.


then you are better than me.

i am from salt central. even nichrome rots within fittings here.....even with stainless. galvanic corrosion is a thing.
 

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