The Nickel Copper line is the best stuff I have ever used. It's easy to bend, flare and cut, plus it will tarnish but wont rot or rust so you should never have to worry about them again.
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Are you saying that your Ranger has 1/4" OD tubing? Mine had original 3/16" OD size.
(Good idea on the cable-ties... also to isolate dissimilar metals.)
OK guys, thanks for your info and indulgence so far, I'm *almost* there... few last critical details to clear up:
0) There IS a way to run the long RABS-to-rear-diff line, withOUT dropping the fuel tank... yes/how?
1) I understand there's a difference between BUBBLE flares (found only at the METRIC/ISO fittings), and DOUBLE flares (aka INV flares) found only at the English/SAE fittings... yes/no?
2) There's only TWO metric/bubble fittings, both at the Master Cylinder...?
3) Despite buying two pre-made lines, 60" and 40", cvar still used 22' of bulk Ni-Cu tubing? Crikey.
4) Is brake fluid an adequate "working lube" for the flaring-tool-to-tubing contact "cold work" zone? Seems you would NOT want any cutting/machine oil in your brake lines, and this would save a cleaning step...? All the how-to videos, even from mfrs., use no lube at all...?
5) 37-degree single AN (Army-Navy) flares are "superior", but... NOT compatible with the splitter blocks on flex hoses and/or AN-37 fittings NOT available in crazy assortment of sizes used on Ranger and/or... WhyTehHeck does cvar tease us with these fancy Brit tech articles anyway??![]()
Thanks in advance.
PS: Spring winding on hard lines... supposedly this is done on the sections subject to "pecking", i.e. damage from stones/gravel thrown from road/tires.
Theoretically, NiCopp, being softer and somewhat weaker than steel, is a bit more vulnerable to this... what to do... what to do...
Um, why is MC subject to pecking? And not the rear axle?