
 Still waiting for the trans,,next up!!!!
  Still waiting for the trans,,next up!!!! 











 
 

Adrian Worman wrote:I hate companies who don't listen to their customers when they have an issue with their products
Happy to take yer coin and then ignore you when there's a problem.........don't these people realise that they are losing valuable trade?
I'd go out of business with an attitude like that



 more importantly,,it works with stainless steel, a hard material to machine and wear mate.  Yeah,,pre 93 Dodge Ram trucks are difficult to find any aftermarket stuff for, I had to use a Ford Grill,,modified to fit my 90 PowerRam. That's truck got totaled in the first week after I sold it. Rednecks,,Booze, brick wall,,the Ram lost!
  more importantly,,it works with stainless steel, a hard material to machine and wear mate.  Yeah,,pre 93 Dodge Ram trucks are difficult to find any aftermarket stuff for, I had to use a Ford Grill,,modified to fit my 90 PowerRam. That's truck got totaled in the first week after I sold it. Rednecks,,Booze, brick wall,,the Ram lost!  Shame,,that truck was perfect,,not a spot of rust on it.
  Shame,,that truck was perfect,,not a spot of rust on it.  
  

fal308 wrote:I always liked that truck. Just wish I had the $$ when you sold it.
That 5 way valve sounds intersting. I like how it doubles as the distribution block. Saves you from a couple of flares. Will be different running back lines all the way down the car though. You putting the block in the stock distribution blcok space?

 )
 )fal308 wrote:Just to be different I wonder if you could try wiring the pigtail to read line pressure or line temp? Would be an interesting, if mostly useless, experiment. (Plus give you another gauge to read)
edited to add; Just thinking, if you used it for pressure, you could build an automatice computer-controlled proportioning valve!


 I might play with the pigtail,,but the Audi Quattro experiment,,,Noooo
  I might play with the pigtail,,but the Audi Quattro experiment,,,Noooo 

 sticky nasty shit. This tool made a 45 degree flare in seconds with a perfect flare!  I mounted the SSBC Prop. valve in the stock location and hung the drivers side line in 10 minutes.
 sticky nasty shit. This tool made a 45 degree flare in seconds with a perfect flare!  I mounted the SSBC Prop. valve in the stock location and hung the drivers side line in 10 minutes.


dave-r wrote:I will be sending my brake lines to you in the future.


Eddie wrote:Sometimes,,to get Pro Results you gotta get the right tooling.

fbernard wrote:Eddie wrote:Sometimes,,to get Pro Results you gotta get the right tooling.
Bought that thing last year, after using the basic Summit tool for the odd job for years.
I'm a tool freak, but that one is the best tool I've bought in a long time.
It's so easy to use it makes me want to redo every brake line on every car I know...
Haven't thought about using stainless though, I'll throw in a roll of stainless next time I order parts. My favorite material for brake lines is a mix of copper and nickel, it's bronze colored and does not corrode. Pretty soft to bend too, and does not crush easily (you can wrap it around a big socket and the tube will stay perfectly round).
There's also plastic-lined steel, the kind they use on modern cars.






dave-r wrote:What the hell you want a heater for you big puff.
 
   
  

