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Author: Subject: braded brake hoses
davrus

posted on 19/8/06 at 05:38 PM Reply With Quote
braded brake hoses

Hi ya , getting close to booking my s.v.a test , just a bit worried about my braided brake hose , does any body know what markings they should have on them to be s.v.a compliant

Many thanks

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DIY Si

posted on 19/8/06 at 05:42 PM Reply With Quote
They don't noramally have markings, so a letter is required from the manufacturer.





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davrus

posted on 19/8/06 at 05:52 PM Reply With Quote
mine have the letter G stamped on the union , is that compliant for s.v.a do you know

Cheers

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DIY Si

posted on 19/8/06 at 06:13 PM Reply With Quote
I'm not sure if the pipe itself and the unions are considered different components. Someone will be along shortly with a more technical answer.





“Let your plans be dark and as impenetratable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.”
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02GF74

posted on 19/8/06 at 07:59 PM Reply With Quote
greate - I've just spent most of today fitting braided hoses on the front

I think you alwo need to wrap them as the braiding is considered sharp!


will an RD catalogue and packet be enoiugh?

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wicket

posted on 19/8/06 at 08:02 PM Reply With Quote
If they are Goodridge series 600 or equivalent then they are OK, I believe that the fittings have a G stamped on them, the hoses are not marked. I took the Goodridge catalogue, assembly instructions & a sample fitting to my SVA just in case but the engineer never questioned them. The 600 series fit the SVA requiements as in the manual, see below Rescued attachment Brake_Pipe_Ferrule.jpg
Rescued attachment Brake_Pipe_Ferrule.jpg

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RazMan

posted on 19/8/06 at 11:20 PM Reply With Quote
It is suprising how abrasive that braiding is! If the braided hose is covered with a plastic coating they are deemed as ok (abrasion wise anyway)





Cheers,
Raz

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Danozeman

posted on 20/8/06 at 03:13 PM Reply With Quote
Is spiral wrap good enough for this?





Dan

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David Jenkins

posted on 20/8/06 at 03:23 PM Reply With Quote
Before I did my SVA about 18 months ago, I spied out the 2 nearest SVA centres (Norwich & Chelmsford) and took a couple of brake hose fittings with me. I asked testers at each centre for their opinion on them - and both said that they wouldn't be happy with them, and would ask questions. In the end I bought some hoses with crimped fittings, simply because the testers wouldn't query them.

The hoses shouldn't rub anything at either lock, so the fact that the braid makes a good file against anything it touches should be irrelevant... but at one lock my hoses lay against the side of the caliper - just like the rubber originals did. The originals had extra heavy sleeving at that point, so I put some spiral wrap held on with heat-shrink tubing in the same place.

Of course, if the hoses touch a wheel or tyre at any point of the lock then that's an instant fail, whether it's braided or rubber hose.

David






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gttman

posted on 20/8/06 at 05:39 PM Reply With Quote
ironically I just bought some and I noticed that they are Speedflow items that screw together rather than crimped.
They definatelly had an inner washer type thing and are designed for high pressure brake applications..... but I are these still likelly to fail?





Andygtt

Please redefine your limits

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David Jenkins

posted on 20/8/06 at 05:52 PM Reply With Quote
Unfortunately, it's a lottery. Some testers will fail them, others will pass them






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NS Dev

posted on 20/8/06 at 09:43 PM Reply With Quote
It does seem that way!

About time that the testers that are failing them despite the manual clearly stating that they are ok (as lonf as they are the right type of screw together ones) were kicked into touch on this one.

Its a bit like the handbrake cable fiasco that cost a lot of folks on here extra work just because one particular tester was failing them on a whim.





Retro RWD is the way forward...........automotive fabrication, car restoration, sheetmetal work, engine conversion retro car restoration and tuning

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