hi, i done my rear brake pipes and i was wondering would i be allowed for the sva?
Thanks
Stuart
Rescued attachment parts 11157.jpg
And this
Stuart
Rescued attachment parts 11156.jpg
And one more
Stuart
Rescued attachment parts 11155.jpg
Looks fine to me, as long as the flexis don't rub on the chassis or wishbones.
[Edited on 8/1/08 by matt_claydon]
Can't see anything obviously wrong there..... apart from the humungous pics
[Edited on 8-1-08 by RazMan]
let me guess, Santa brought you a new 10 Mega pixie camera and a utlra wide LCD screen
look ok to me although black P-clips are the fashion for 2008.
NB some SVA centres have been known to fail exposed braid on the hoses - sharp edges would you believe? - to play it safe, wrap some convoluted tubing
over them with cable ties.
quote:
Originally posted by 02GF74
NB some SVA centres have been known to fail exposed braid on the hoses - sharp edges would you believe? - to play it safe, wrap some convoluted tubing over them with cable ties.
Sorry about the big picture, thank you for the quick replys.
Thank you
Stuart
what have you done with the other end of the flexi at the upright/wheel end?
tom
i have done this
picture below:
Stuart
Rescued attachment parts 11149.jpg
The hub end needs to be supported where it meets the flexi, else eventually the copper pipe will fatigue and split.
The union in the last pic between flexi and solid needs a solid mouting as well.
Pat...
Damn, beaten to a reply again.
Pat...
so i will have to weld a bracket on to the hub, what size steel will i need to use, has any one got any pics of the bracket??
thank you
Stuart
I made a bracket that is held in place by one of the suspension bolts and made the metal pipe to suit.
They can fail braided flexy pipes if they're rubbing against other things, like brake pipes, electrics, or similar. The braiding can work like a file against other surfaces!
I used small Spirap for wrapping the braided flexibles from Car Builder Solutions and they went through SVA without the tester batting an eyelid.
John
my bet is that little yellow bung in the T piece will leak.
i am have not done the other side yet i need a brake flaring tool, so i can shorten it.
stuart
Picked up two things you might want to look at ,as your pipe gose over the diff support brackets you might get some chaffing their ,also at the wheel
hub end where you have your solid brake pipe from your wheel cylinder to your flexi hose there is no support braket .
attached some picks of my set if it helps
Rescued attachment Picture 219.jpg
also its best to give each side on the T the same lenght!
it wil result in the same pressure losts both rear wheels wil act more the same while unther braking.
Tks
quote:
Originally posted by tks
also its best to give each side on the T the same lenght!
it wil result in the same pressure losts both rear wheels wil act more the same while unther braking.
two points, already covered but:
1) bracket in 3mm ish steel to support the flexi to copper junction near the drum (weld a bit of 3 mm strip on or hold it with a bolt head)
2) flexi looks like its rubbing the chassis?? If it is it will fail. Just slacken the end fittings and rotate the flexi to a safe position and lock
them up again.
Why cant the flexy be screwed straight into the wheel cylinder?
so 3mm steel is need for the brackets, and if the flexi is touching the chassis,can i wrap something around the flexi??
Thanks
Stuart
Im pretty sure if the flexi is prone to touching (and think when being driven) that it will need to be re-routed so it wont or secured. Wrapping it
with something wont stop the contact.
I fitted flexi's direct to wheel cylinder and didnt need to faff on with small solid pipes and brackets.
[Edited on 10/1/08 by DarrenW]
quote:
Originally posted by RazMan
quote:
Originally posted by tks
also its best to give each side on the T the same lenght!
it wil result in the same pressure losts both rear wheels wil act more the same while unther braking.
It makes no difference whatever length the pipes are - you are still moving the same volume of fluid so the pressure is still the same.
TKS it will make no difference to braking, don't confuse the chap.
On cars with diagonal split braking systems the front lines are way shorter than the rears and there is no problem at all.