I use a HFT swivel lead hose (a 'whip?') for my scavenged HFT media blasting cabinet. It still doesn't leak at the swivel, so that's good, however, for some reason, the rubber at the end of the crimped brass connector began to tear, and it eventually cut-through, and began leaking. I used a Dremel-style tool to cut-through the brass crimp fitting for the hose, at the threaded 1/4" hose connection and I took it to my friend who makes SS hydraulic hoses for pressure washers and for motorcycle uses (brake lines, NOS systems) and he crimped on a new fitting, after cutting the hose back to a good point. I suppose that with time, it may occur again, but it lasted a couple of years. We'll see. I bought another whip just in-case, they weren't available for awhile, I had trouble finding one on-line in the length and fitting configuration I wanted, though I could have bought a shorter one, and cut-out the brass fittings and had my friend crimp-on a new SS hose, if I wanted-to. I suspect the swivel would then be the point of failure at some distant time. Here are shots of replacing the glass, of the 2x4 base I made for the benchtop cabinet, using BORLA casters, and at the cabinet back, a shot of the repaired whip, and the NAPA filter I installed. I got the cabinet when I was headed to an electrical supply house, and in the warehouse area as I was driving-through, a worker was putting-out the cabinet for junk. I stopped, and he helped me load it into my truck. I also got a 10-ton bottle jack in-need of some fluid.
The backyard loggia is coming-along great. That's gonna be a good entertainment place.
A question about the brick-work: is the wide mortar a 'thing?' I'm no mason, but that seems like a lotta mud. I believe in Florida with the HVHZ (high-velocity hurricane zone) requirements, a wall would need smaller joints to meet the wind-load codes. The 'open' brick pattern for the dogs, despite being able to 'pass' air, is something I doubt could be done here.
We did a couple of additions to our CBS home, one was a new attached 2-car garage, using part-of the existing 2-car, and we had-to have rebar from the foundation footers to the 1-story top-of-wall tie beam, every several feet, the CBS cell with the tie-beam filled with grout. Since Hurricane Andrew, the Florida Building Code has undergone several revisions, and the buildings are the better for it.