X3 or 4 on the mastercool, having different sets thru the years the mastercool works great.After buying a couple cheap sets that didn't work, I bought the master cool set too. But the eastwoods kit gets great reviews here as well.
I have one like this -> https://www.ebay.com/itm/HAND-HELD-...200093?hash=item3d5a5f4cdd:g:ij4AAOSw2s1Utrln
(come in a multitude of brand names, but are the same thing)
Does Steel, copper and cupronickel without issue and on the car.
I actually have 2, one for SAE single and double flares and another for DIN bubble flares.
Recommended thoroughly and so easy to use once you read the instruction leaflet.
Essentially
Cut pipe back to sound metal
deburr and remove plastic coating
fit brake union
loosen 2 small bolts to allow pipe into tool
hand tighten 2 small bolts
screw in stop
tighten 2 small bolts with wrench
unscrew stop
grease op1 punch tool with supplied grease (looks like red mononuclear grease)
screw in op1 tool and snug down with wrench
undo op1
grease op2
screw in and snug down
undo op2
loosen 2 small bolts to allow now flared pipe to be femoved from tool
I really personally rate it, used it plenty of times on various brands of cars from Ford (Mazda) Ranger truck, Toyota Yaris/Echo, Saab 9-3 etc
Even my old man was impressed and he's notoriously hard to please.
I have one like this -> https://www.ebay.com/itm/HAND-HELD-...200093?hash=item3d5a5f4cdd:g:ij4AAOSw2s1Utrln
(come in a multitude of brand names, but are the same thing)
Does Steel, copper and cupronickel without issue and on the car.
I actually have 2, one for SAE single and double flares and another for DIN bubble flares.
Recommended thoroughly and so easy to use once you read the instruction leaflet.
Essentially
Cut pipe back to sound metal
deburr and remove plastic coating
fit brake union
loosen 2 small bolts to allow pipe into tool
hand tighten 2 small bolts
screw in stop
tighten 2 small bolts with wrench
unscrew stop
grease op1 punch tool with supplied grease (looks like red mononuclear grease)
screw in op1 tool and snug down with wrench
undo op1
grease op2
screw in and snug down
undo op2
loosen 2 small bolts to allow now flared pipe to be femoved from tool
I really personally rate it, used it plenty of times on various brands of cars from Ford (Mazda) Ranger truck, Toyota Yaris/Echo, Saab 9-3 etc
Even my old man was impressed and he's notoriously hard to please.
Hi guys. Is there a decent tool set for doing the double flared brake lines. Just a hobbyist so don’t want a high end set. Just something that will work ok. Thanks
I got this one, but good flares can be made if you go slow and pay attention.
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Bill
It won't be for life. 10 years or so and you will be repairing/replacing the pump/yoke part when the seals fail.Mastercool for life and be done with flaring problems.
This is by far the best flaring tool for automotive applications. https://surrauto.com/kits/pft409/
It is available from Amazon and Ebay under $250 at times. BTW, I have used the Mastercool flaring set for years as a professional mechanic and the SUR & R kit is better in every aspect.
It won't be for life. 10 years or so and you will be repairing/replacing the pump/yoke part when the seals fail.
Yes, it is. I am not saying that the mastercool isn't a good set. It is. I have two friends with them that use them professionally and they really like them. I have borrowed one to do a quick connect fuel line once. They have both had the pump fail from approximately a decade of use. If I was a pro working of vehicles, I wouldn't bat an eye on buying one. I have the eastwood (sykes pickavent) knock off and its excellent. I to had issues with off center flares in CuNI (all i use now) but have not with the eastwood. And there is little chance that it will ever fail. I have done a lot of brake lines with it and find it a wonderful tool. I have considered getting the AN/JIC flaring turret and dies for it but have a ridgid roll flaring tool that does 37 degree flares wonderfully so I have not done so yet.Isn't that going to be a problem with ANY of the hydraulic sets, regardless of manufacturer? Can they be serviced?
If the hydraulic units are not worth it (vs the Eastwood style mechanical type), that would be good to know.
It's been about 6 years since I did the lines on the RV. At the time, CuNi was only available locally as a bare roll. Prior to that, I'd bought steel lines with pre-formed flares, after getting frustrated with DIY flares.
The DIY flares that I made with the CuNi were irritating as well (was using a cheap manual kit, and the flares kept coming out asymmetrically).
I see that CuNi lines are now available with pre-formed ends, that might be the way to go?
I also see that full pre-bent tubing sets are available for this car (in steel or stainless). That's certainly appealing (although not cheap).
Mike