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Author: Subject: 'Standard' brake flexies
Mark Allanson

posted on 19/4/04 at 05:33 PM Reply With Quote
'Standard' brake flexies

I am at the expensive part of the build, I need so many parts to continue the progress I have been making.

I need brake flexies, I don't want stainless, or ones that I have to make myself, I just want to phone my local factors, demand a ridiculous % of discount, and ask for a pair of flexies from a road car that will fit my book chassis with book wishbones and Cortina uprights. I tried a search but it was far from conclusive.

I have heard the Cortina Mk5 will be OK, any confirmation? Part numbers would be really nice!!

Thanks
Mark





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stephen_gusterson

posted on 19/4/04 at 06:50 PM Reply With Quote
I bought std flexies from a granada for my car - which was the original donor. I didnt use em cos they were way too short.

I bought custom ones at about 15 quid a chuck from merlin motorsport. Basically braided were the only game in town.

I thin the rubber std ones were 50 - 70 of the cost of braided anyway....


btw - the whole friggin thing is the most expensive bit of the build..... its the cheapness of the chassis steel that lulls you into a false sense of economy..... then it all piles up on you and you realise ron champion was bullshitting.

atb

steve






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NS Dev

posted on 19/4/04 at 07:18 PM Reply With Quote
I love that last bit, very nicely summarised, for once I am not going to argue with you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It's not difficult to make the hoses up yourself, the bits from rally design (www.raldes.co.uk) are cheap enough (off the top of my head as their website seems to be down, £4 per end fitting and about £5 a metre for the hose? something like that anyway)

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JoelP

posted on 19/4/04 at 07:53 PM Reply With Quote
two pairs of standard sierra front flexi's have gone on mine, they are just long enough to cover lock to lock, but i had to position the bulkhead mounts carefully. They were about £20 all in.






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stephen_gusterson

posted on 19/4/04 at 07:54 PM Reply With Quote
I hadnt noticed that you were arguing with me at times - im gonna have to be a lot more stroppy with you from now on


BTW - the fittings - according to sva - must not be push in type - which infers they have to be crimped, which infers the use of a special tool which infers you cant make em easily yourself.

I wonder if thats the start of an argument




atb

steve






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NS Dev

posted on 19/4/04 at 08:01 PM Reply With Quote
errrr, sort of! You CAN use self assembled ends, with seperate olives, as long as they have an "inner support tube", which the rally design fittings do have. (read the thread on "Euroquip 600 hose and fittings" this explains)

I know of a lot of cars using these type of assembled fittings which go straight through the SVA.

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Mark Allanson

posted on 19/4/04 at 08:19 PM Reply With Quote
If I have to make up the hoses myself, I will, but the advantage of standard one is that if I order them at 8:30 tomorrow, I will have them delivered to me by 10:00. I buy about 10K a week in parts, and choose the suppliers myself according to discounts, speed of delivery and profficiency of the suppliers. If I order something and say I want 60% discount for myself, I usually get it!!

Joel, I am guessing your sierra hoses were for sierra hubs and calipers? If so I don't think they would be suitable for my Cortina M16's, as they have a short standing pipe running from the caliper inlet - or do I stand corrected?

I have the advantage that my ally front side panels are about 2" further outboard than anyone elses, so I can get away with shorter hoses.

Comments?





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JoelP

posted on 19/4/04 at 09:12 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Allanson
Joel, I am guessing your sierra hoses were for sierra hubs and calipers? If so I don't think they would be suitable for my Cortina M16's, as they have a short standing pipe running from the caliper inlet - or do I stand corrected?



far be it from me to correct anyone! i dont have a clue, so i guess they are different. but it is bloody hard to cover all angles of steering, i considered putting a short metal pipe on the hub to bring the flexi attachment point closer to the hub pivot axis (if you catch my drift...) so that the flexis dont turn so dramatically. do your calipers already do this?






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Mark Allanson

posted on 19/4/04 at 09:39 PM Reply With Quote
Some people use banjo fittings on the M16, I personally don't think this is a good idea, as the M16 is designed for a compressed brake pipe flare to be fitted into the inlet. Joel, I see your point about the end of the the small standing brake pipe being closer to the pivot point and less prone to twisting and fowling, which amplifies my original question about Mk5 hoses fitting a book chassis.

Someone MUST have fitted standard hoses to a book chasis/ front running gear.





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britishtrident

posted on 20/4/04 at 06:13 AM Reply With Quote
No reason not to use standard Cortina flexies they are more than long enough and by far the most suitable hose for the job --- the connection to the flex hose should be on bracket mounted close to the steering axis as it was on the Cortina.

Because they use olive fittings braided hoses are best left for competition use where are can be inspected regularly, on a road car the danger is some one will regard them as "fit and forget" .

[Edited on 20/4/04 by britishtrident]

[Edited on 20/4/04 by britishtrident]

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NS Dev

posted on 20/4/04 at 07:02 AM Reply With Quote
True. The main reason they are not "fit and forget" though is (according to the manufacturers) because at VERY high mileages (100,000+ in "normal" driving) the stainless braid can fatigue fracture, and the broken wire ends then "can" end up piercing the teflon inner.
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stephen_gusterson

posted on 20/4/04 at 08:46 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
No reason not to use standard Cortina flexies they are more than long enough and by far the most suitable hose for the job ---
[Edited on 20/4/04 by britishtrident]



strange statement. If you read all the gumph from the hose mfr they say that braided are much better as they provide a firmer pedal ss there is little expansion in the rubber pipe - cos there isnt any.

Once I understood what I needed, Merlin also sent em next day, just like real ones.....

dunno if they do a trade discount thou....


The pedal on my car is rock hard, and the end fittings come with nice bulkhead nuts that allow you to fit em real easy - not like the stupid clips that are rusty from a std Ford.

as far as fit and forget - they are pretty damn visible on a locost - which is another reason not to use nasty looking black rubber - and how many miles does a locost do. And does a locost owner never look his car over mechanically? Its a constant love affair of mods and care I recon

atb

steve

[Edited on 20/4/04 by stephen_gusterson]






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Peteff

posted on 20/4/04 at 08:49 AM Reply With Quote
I think mine were Mk1 Granada but it was a long time since I bought them. They are screwed directly into the caliper and are long enough from lock to lock
http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/photos.php?action=showphoto&photo=brake_pipe.jpg





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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britishtrident

posted on 20/4/04 at 02:39 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Peteff
I think mine were Mk1 Granada but it was a long time since I bought them. They are screwed directly into the caliper and are long enough from lock to lock
http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/photos.php?action=showphoto&photo=brake_pipe.jpg


Looking at the picture the hoses have the wrong end to screw directly into the caliper.
The type of hose ends that screw straight into a caliper or wheel cylinder are short and use a copper washer to seal.

The Granada/Consol front suspenion and brakes were the same as the Cortina 3 apart from the heavy duty 5 stud hubs ( the Cortina was built on a chopped down Grandada floor pressing) .
The hose is intended to go to a bracket with a short steel pipe connecting it to the caliper.

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Peteff

posted on 20/4/04 at 06:29 PM Reply With Quote
If it works?

It hasn't leaked fluid in the years it's been on the car, it passed sva and doesnt need a washer to seal it so it must be more efficient than the recommended fitting. The threads reach the bottom of the caliper thread and it has the same taper on the end. It passes MOT every year as well. I am of the opinion that if something works and is up to the job it is the right part. Should we stop adapting stuff because it's not what it was made for, no more top ball joints or maxi joints then, or fitting zetecs to type 9 boxes or bike engines in cars. We might as well stop building if that's the way to think. What are you building by the way?





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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Steve Hnz

posted on 22/4/04 at 07:12 AM Reply With Quote
Mark, once you know what fittings you require on each end & you should know that from where you got your bits from, then you should be able to tell your brake people what they are & ask for a hose of X length as required, many cars share the same fittings but have different length hoses, its just a matter of teacking down the correct ones. I`ve done this on a Land Rover with a suspension lift no problem & my brake guys reckoned there were few they couldn`t place. HTH, Steve.
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ernie

posted on 26/4/04 at 05:18 PM Reply With Quote
brake flexis

standard flexis to fit cortina / sierra also will fit rear axle are lucas/ girling PHC 144 approx £6.00 each from Partco or if braided Goodrich G0033 is a complete set for front hubs 7 rear axle avalible fron Burtonpower @ approx £31
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Mark Allanson

posted on 26/4/04 at 08:43 PM Reply With Quote
Rally design do a complete set for a Mk5 Cortina for £18.50. They are braded stainless so should do the trick, can anyone see any reason why I get any problems with these?





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Northy

posted on 26/4/04 at 08:47 PM Reply With Quote
You'll need to prove the end has a tube to go inside the PTFE pipe, same as I do. I'm just planning on buying a spare end to show the SVA inspector.

Cheers





Graham


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Mark Allanson

posted on 26/4/04 at 09:06 PM Reply With Quote
I'll give them a ring tomorrow, if they have the internal pipe, I will order a set and a spare end as you suggest

Thanks
Mark





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Northy

posted on 26/4/04 at 09:09 PM Reply With Quote
No worries





Graham


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andkilde

posted on 27/4/04 at 03:09 PM Reply With Quote
Just to add to the "be careful around braided stainless" conversation.

My wife is a fluid power specialist and gives me no end of grief about "proper" hose selection for a given application.

She has a couple of beefs with braided teflon.

1) Careless assembly (or careful mis-assembly) is guaranteed to lead to grief with ends popping off.

2) Stainless braided teflon is designed for high temperature, moderate pressure and low flexure applications. The teflon liner has no intrinsic strength (blows out like bubble gum if you get any splitting of outer stainless sheath), is not bonded to the wire and is not a multi-layer hose (which provides a bit of redundancy in failure). Also, despite it's robust looks it is NOT abrasion resistant, any rubbing will result in failure.

That said, I still use it, exercise caution and inspect regularly as British Trident suggested.

There are some new braided teflon hoses available with a tinted translucent polyurethane coating -- last I checked they weren't available as small as -3 and -4 but when they do start making them that small (if they haven't already) they might be more suitable than the standard stuff.

Cheers, Ted

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Mark Allanson

posted on 27/4/04 at 07:10 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Northy
You'll need to prove the end has a tube to go inside the PTFE pipe, same as I do. I'm just planning on buying a spare end to show the SVA inspector.

Cheers


I rang rally design about the internal pipe from the union to the PTFE liner, the lad on the other end had no idea what I was talking about, all I could get out of him was 'loads of people have bought 'em and fixed 'em to their cars', he didn't even know what SVA was!

I appologised for wasting his time and hung up

Are their any knowledgable suppliers out there from who I can buy with confidence?





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Northy

posted on 27/4/04 at 07:36 PM Reply With Quote
Mark,

We got a very similar reply. But because I've already got there pipes, I've ordered an end anyway. If its any good (right) I'll let you know and you could still order from them and even borrow the end for your SVA if you wanted.

Cheers





Graham


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Mark Allanson

posted on 27/4/04 at 08:25 PM Reply With Quote
That would be ideal, when are you getting the spare end to check? I need to get the flexies asap, I am building so fast at the moment, I am nearly tripping over my self!





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