brake flaring tool

brake flaring tool

Author
Discussion

gsd2000

Original Poster:

11,515 posts

198 months

Friday 7th June 2013
quotequote all
Could anyone recommend a good brake flaring tool

My rear brake lines could do with being replaced soon, so ideally needs to easy to use under a car


thanks

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

258 months

Friday 7th June 2013
quotequote all
Yes this is very good:

http://serenco.co.uk/uploads/products/brake_flare_...


http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Brake-Pipe-Flaring-Tool-...

Comes with one of those great tubs of lubricating grease reading 'Do not eat'. biggrin

Edited by Evoluzione on Friday 7th June 22:24

ch427

10,624 posts

248 months

Sunday 9th June 2013
quotequote all
make sure it will flare the hard cupro type pipes you will probably have on your car, most cheaper stuff will only do copper.

gsd2000

Original Poster:

11,515 posts

198 months

Sunday 9th June 2013
quotequote all
ch427 said:
make sure it will flare the hard cupro type pipes you will probably have on your car, most cheaper stuff will only do copper.
that was actually my next question which material would be best for the actual brake pipes?

bearman68

4,869 posts

147 months

Sunday 9th June 2013
quotequote all

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Brake-Pipe-Flaring-Tool-...

Comes with one of those great tubs of lubricating grease reading 'Do not eat'. biggrin

Edited by Evoluzione on Friday 7th June 22:24

[/quote]

One of these - I use it in a commercial shop on a regular basis. It enables you to flare (not DIN) underneath the car on steel pipe, and therefore join it to the copper pipe normally used to replace the steel rubbish.
When you are preparing for this job, be aware that it's normally impossible to seperate the flexi hoses from the steel, so you may as well purchase the flexi hoses straight away. Also you'll find it easier if you flare the pipe from the master cylinder first, and then cap it with a hammered over joint. It stops the fluid from escaping from the master cylinder, and makes it easier to bleed when the time comes.
Finally, use DIN 5.1 fluid - bit more expensive, but much better.

Best of luck.

ch427

10,624 posts

248 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
gsd2000 said:
that was actually my next question which material would be best for the actual brake pipes?
copper is fine for most normal people, im sure someone will be along in a minute to disagree though!

bgunn

1,725 posts

146 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
Cunifer. It's marginally more expensive, but better to work with as it doesn't work harden anywhere nearly as badly as pure copper.

Usually the actual job of fitting the lines is the 'cost', not the lines themselves, so fit the best pipe.

The Black Flash

13,735 posts

213 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
Having done my whole kit with Cunifer/Kunifer because everyone said it was better, and then had to do it all again to get the flares right, breaking the tool in the process, I'd go for copper next time.

In theory it might not be as good, but it's about a thousand times easier to get good, well sealed flares with.

InfoRetrieval

386 posts

163 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
I used Kunifer but you must use a decent tool to do the flares.

This type is rubbish:

http://www.machinemart.co.uk/shop/product/details/...

This is one I bought (Sealey PFT08). It contains proper dies for the flares does a much better job:

http://www.justoffbase.co.uk/On-Car-Brake-Flaring-...

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

270 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
The Black Flash said:
Having done my whole kit with Cunifer/Kunifer because everyone said it was better, and then had to do it all again to get the flares right, breaking the tool in the process, I'd go for copper next time.

In theory it might not be as good, but it's about a thousand times easier to get good, well sealed flares with.
That's almost certainly down to the quality (or lack thereof) of the pipe flaring tool. The cheap ones that use two bars with multiple different sized holes as listed by someone above are virtually useless.

With a decent quality flaring tool and a bit of practice it's not hard to make perfect flares cupro-nickel pipe. The soft copper pipes are actually illegal to use for brake hydraulics in some countries due to the risks of work hardening and subsequent cracking.

bgunn

1,725 posts

146 months

Monday 10th June 2013
quotequote all
Mr2Mike said:
That's almost certainly down to the quality (or lack thereof) of the pipe flaring tool. The cheap ones that use two bars with multiple different sized holes as listed by someone above are virtually useless.

With a decent quality flaring tool and a bit of practice it's not hard to make perfect flares cupro-nickel pipe. The soft copper pipes are actually illegal to use for brake hydraulics in some countries due to the risks of work hardening and subsequent cracking.
I wouldn't feel comfortable using pure copper pipe. Granted, as long as you use the OEM pipe clips and ensure the pipe is properly supported and not stressed in any place, it should be fine, but I wouldn't take the risk. As said, get a proper flaring tool, and use the proper pipe.