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#1 | |
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AF Newbie
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
Posts: 5
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Stainless Steel Brake Lines Installaion!!!
Hi, I bought some stainless steel flexible brake lines for my 03 Impala and couldn't get them on.
My plan was to cut off the old cable with a utility knife. and use a ratchet on the part where the hose was and a wrench to hold the brass/permanent part of the line from twisting. The old flexible cable wouldn't unscrew from the permanent brass threaded part of the brake line though. I tried for about two hours but things were starting to get stripped and stuff... So I took my car and stainless cables to my dealer who agreed to put them on for me. It took them about a whole day and cost _a lot_ for labor, but they got the new lines on. And the work looks really clean, with nothing striped etc. So... How did they do it????? Thanks! |
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#2 | |
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AF Enthusiast
![]() Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: dffdf, Wisconsin
Posts: 849
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Re: Stainless Steel Brake Lines Installaion!!!
Brake lines are easy, as long as you have the right tool, a flare nut wrench.
If you were having difficulty disconnecting the "soft" line from the hard line, then the hard line fitting could have been a little rusted onto the soft lines fitting. a little rust eater could have helped you with that. Otherwise if they didn't couldn't get it off that way, they probabaly used a torch to heat up the fittings and then broke them loose. For future reference: take off brake line from caliper with socket or wrench, then take a flare nut wrench and open end wrench and disconnect the other sides fittings, repalce with new lines, use new crush washers on the caliper side of the line, and re-tighten everything. Pretty easy actually, unless you had seized fittings. |
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#3 | |
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AF Newbie
Thread starter
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
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Re: Stainless Steel Brake Lines Installaion!!!
Drat. I am happy with my new setup but I did want to do the work myself. Also I noticed that the back brakes hadn't been working for quite awhile since the rotors were all pitted and rusted and there was a soot covering them.
The guy at the dealership said "they see that sometimes" and I think he said they lubricate those chrome sliders that the pads ride on in the calipers!?! On my brake lines, I did actually hit those fittings with PB Blaster for a few consecutive days in advance before I started the work on Sat morning, and I figured by cutting the hose buy the fitting I could put a spark plug socket over the nut. That all worked, but that thing wouldn't budge. I put a 2' bar on my socket wrench to give me some more torque but it was only stripping the brass nut that I was holding in place with the other wrench. The dealership took all day Sat., from 10 AM until whenever and they were done by 9 AM Mon. Thanks again. |
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#4 | |
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AF Newbie
Thread starter
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
Posts: 5
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Re: Stainless Steel Brake Lines Installaion!!!
Also... I didn't have the flare nut wrench as you describe... I had never heard of that until you mentioned it!!!
Thanks again for explaining!!! |
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