Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
Standard inverted 45° double flare for SAE brake lines. Nothing else will be safe.
Metric brake lines are inverted 45° double flares. Made several feet of these up on various Subaru, Toyota, Datsun, along with VW Rabbits, Jettas, Ghias, and Beetles.
Metric fuel lines on the higher pressure VW K-Jetronic Mechanical Fuel Injection had ISO bubble flares but a lot of other early fuel injection systems used 37° & 45° double flares or just beaded lines with good clamps.
Maybe I'm just feeling old and grumpy today... but... Flair and Flare have very different meanings. Flair is one of those pufta words.
What GM vehicles use ISO flares on the brake lines?
Not saying they didn't.
It's not a real good union for high hydraulic pressures... I'm surprised US DOT let em use them on brakes in the US.
I guess you can buy anything including the DOT.
Maybe I'm just feeling old and grumpy today... but... Flair and Flare have very different meanings. Flair is one of those pufta words.
Well I dunno about all those furrin rides, but GM's metric lines were almost always bubble flare. Just thinking about all the lines I've made for them makes my knuckles hurt.
You must be registered for see images attach
You're right, all squares should be standard thread and inverted flare. I only mentioned it in case someone was using this thread for info and they had a later truck. I wouldn't put it past GM if some of the very late squares used metric threads and bubble flare somewhere.
Which as a side discussion, bubble flare was far from an oddity. You don't have to believe me, but I promise you there are millions of GM vehicles driving around with metric fittings and bubble flares. If I didn't have a buddy that comes and hauls off my scrap all the time, I'd have a bunch of factory GM lines to show you. They are so common that I keep the bubble/metric line lengths in stock at home. Although I am remembering now that the last '03 truck I did, probably did use standard fittings. I honestly never gave much thought to which style was used because neither style surprised me. I've always just replicated what the factory did without logging in my mind which style it was.
But anyway, I pulled this off the shelf. A front brake hose for an '86 Camaro, and the correct metric/bubble line that matches it. A very common fitting for GM cars.
You must be registered for see images attach
Interesting. I must've not done enough late 80's American cars in my misspent youth.
I got curious and looked around on Google for the odd British-Girling bubble flares I saw once on a Triumph...They have a taper against the ferrule and against the fitting unlike the ISO DIN bubbles that have a flat against the ferrule and bubble against the fitting.
This popped up with more than you wanted to know about the brake line flare fittings.
http://racetrackdriving.com/tech/brake-line-flares-metric-sae-inverted-bubble/
There are a bunch more variations than I thought there were.
Obviously not all Japanese rigs used JIS 37° and not all Brit rigs used British-Girling bubble flares or the odd 37° English but the basics of what to look for are there too.