Once again Tom, you made it look easy for all. 80-90psi is the number I have been using . The dents start to move at about, IIRC, 700-800 degrees , you will see the line just gets an orange hue to it . Turn the lights down in the shop and you can see the orange color appear . Getting the Nuts off was fantastic as well , lots of detail of how to make it successful . Thank you Tom for all of your efforts Ian ICARP
That ahh feeling when the nut gets loose👌🏻. I wouldn’t have thought that it would have been possible to unkink those hose but you did it. Again I learn new ways to use tools or make your own. That car is gonna look fire with those painted bumpers! Thanks
I was very close to cutting that nut off. Looking forward to Gettysburg ng those bumpers on. They are catching some sun rays today to cure the clear even faster!
Nicely done! I always wanted to try this after reading about it on the Pelican Parts forum. Fortunately my lines were not that badly crushed, so I just stripped and repainted them. I did have to cut the nuts on the side connecting to the cooler though - too much rust and they just wouldn't budge no matter what... Also, nice to have a local store that still stocks parts & tools like that. I'd have to be ordering over the Internet where I live...
Really have benefitted from your build. I'm 3 years into a complete build on my '82 911 and just this week i've been struggling with stuck nuts and crushed oil lines. What are the odds you show up with solutions... again! Two questions, where did you find hardware for pressurizing lines and how do you plan to service thermostat without destroying it? I've tried a large washer held in vice grips with heat applied to unscrew housing with no luck....thanks for some of the best educational and entertaining videos on TH-cam
Thanks Andrew. Too kind! There's a race shop 10 minutes from me, Mesa Hose. They have everything and can make Porsche oil hoses too. Stay tuned for that. Threads are M30x1.5 and he had to cap it with two fittings. One end is JIC. Check a local hydraulic hose supplier. I spent just shy of $40 on these. Let me know if you want to borrow them. As for the thermostat, I'll probably weld some kind of special tool and clamp on it while turning. See endless content, right!!!
Great instructions Tom! I have to do the same so will give it a go with 100 psi and my torches. By the way , I used your technique on the rocker flange to pull it down (Also gets crushed) and it worked great. Keep those videos coming!
Just did this procedure today and it was remarkable! Oxy/ace torch with 90-100 psi in the line; careful to hold the heat around and back and forth over the crushed area and it pops right up. I think it needs a second round once I get it cleaned up. Saves a bundle. Thanks again for the real world useable tip.
Part looks like copper. Need a vid on your painting the bumpers. Prep, primer and gloss coat. Brand of spray gun, pressure, tip size. Thanks enjoy your vids.
I didn't do a video on the rear bumper because it was exactly the same process as the front. I did make a video on that one. th-cam.com/video/LHUrHnftpAU/w-d-xo.html I don't remember if I talked about this gun in this video. It's a Warwick 904HE, 1.4 tip, pressure depends on material. For example I use 29psi for clear. Less for base. Thanks for watching!
Reassemble with copper never seize . That valve is called a Shrader Valve (Bicycle Valve) My fix would be to run lines using braided hose and convert to AN fittings . LineX coating would do well and look good
I would not use copper anti-seize on aluminum. Use aluminum anti-seize. Braided hose with an ID of the tubing will be quite large in diameter, and adapting AN fittings to the thermostat housing difficult.
Dissimaler metals Copper offers more suprestion of oxidation and metal transfer durring tightening. Aluminum anti seize tends to clump in the thread lands as you tighten. Many more reasons not to use a Aluminum based product.
Great job. Mine were crushed completely closed 😥 So I elected to get the finned oil lines from Elephant racing. Both lines are just under $1000. But, less money than stock lines. I ordered them through Pelican and used my 10% PCA discount. All in for $800 and change. The lines were excellent quality and fit with just a little tweaking.....just a thought, why couldn't you just cut out the damaged sections and solder in new ones. If it works for the plumbing in your house then why not oil ???....
The elephant lines are very nice and not absurdly priced and they come with bling too. Plan B was to cut and splice😂 The factory ends are brazed on much like house plumbing. Solder is a little too soft for vibration, but I see no problem with the correct brazing rod.
Can anyone tell me if they make oversized intake valve seats for the 356 cylinder head. I purchased a pair of 356 cylinder heads on eBay and found one head to have a loose valve seat. Thanks , John.
Once again Tom, you made it look easy for all. 80-90psi is the number I have been using .
The dents start to move at about, IIRC, 700-800 degrees , you will see the line just gets an orange hue to it . Turn the lights down in the shop and you can see the orange color appear .
Getting the Nuts off was fantastic as well , lots of detail of how to make it successful .
Thank you Tom for all of your efforts
Ian ICARP
Thanks Ian! It's time you make another appearance on garage time.
Fletch working on my favorite car! Entertainment has never been better. 🙂
Ha ha, glad your watching
I hit the like button, when you said Huntington Beach :D
Cool, you from around here?
I just checked my oil lines; crushed too!
Oh no,. Sorry.
Very cool technique.
That ahh feeling when the nut gets loose👌🏻. I wouldn’t have thought that it would have been possible to unkink those hose but you did it. Again I learn new ways to use tools or make your own. That car is gonna look fire with those painted bumpers! Thanks
I was very close to cutting that nut off.
Looking forward to Gettysburg ng those bumpers on. They are catching some sun rays today to cure the clear even faster!
great instructional video tom! in the right hands, a torch can do wonders! :)
Thanks Benji.
Great idea heating the pipe while pressurized. 👍 Bumpers look great! Getting excited to see the 3.2 in Mac.
Wanna take a guess how much a new Porsche oil line cost?
@@GarageTimeAutoResto Probably a number with four digits!
Three digits, unless you need both, then it's four! For brass tubing, unreal.
@@GarageTimeAutoResto Something's come as quite a surprise. Twelve 9:1 pistons for example. OMG 😱
Awesome. You could just see the dents coming out. Great video.
Kinda like that movie "Christine"
Well caught up, bravo
I have done many sets with just map pass and 150 psi pressure. Look almost perfect just using the map pass.
That was pretty cool. Like magic!
wow, that worked really well. Nice!
Awesome work. Happy new year
Cheers! Happy new year🤙
Nicely done! I always wanted to try this after reading about it on the Pelican Parts forum. Fortunately my lines were not that badly crushed, so I just stripped and repainted them. I did have to cut the nuts on the side connecting to the cooler though - too much rust and they just wouldn't budge no matter what... Also, nice to have a local store that still stocks parts & tools like that. I'd have to be ordering over the Internet where I live...
I'm lucky to have lots of car shops near me. Maybe I can do a TH-cam tour someday.
Really have benefitted from your build. I'm 3 years into a complete build on my '82 911 and just this week i've been struggling with stuck nuts and crushed oil lines. What are the odds you show up with solutions... again! Two questions, where did you find hardware for pressurizing lines and how do you plan to service thermostat without destroying it? I've tried a large washer held in vice grips with heat applied to unscrew housing with no luck....thanks for some of the best educational and entertaining videos on TH-cam
Thanks Andrew. Too kind!
There's a race shop 10 minutes from me, Mesa Hose. They have everything and can make Porsche oil hoses too. Stay tuned for that.
Threads are M30x1.5 and he had to cap it with two fittings. One end is JIC. Check a local hydraulic hose supplier. I spent just shy of $40 on these.
Let me know if you want to borrow them.
As for the thermostat, I'll probably weld some kind of special tool and clamp on it while turning.
See endless content, right!!!
I'll send them out Andrew! I deleted your comment with your address in it, but I have copied it down.
Tom
Great instructions Tom! I have to do the same so will give it a go with 100 psi and my torches. By the way , I used your technique on the rocker flange to pull it down (Also gets crushed) and it worked great. Keep those videos coming!
Awesome, glad someone's finds useful info these vids 👍
Just did this procedure today and it was remarkable! Oxy/ace torch with 90-100 psi in the line; careful to hold the heat around and back and forth over the crushed area and it pops right up. I think it needs a second round once I get it cleaned up. Saves a bundle. Thanks again for the real world useable tip.
Awesome! So glad this worked for you too!
Great job on the lines, I was expecting it to go all wrong and then attempt plan B, how wrong was I
Top tip 👍
Ha ha, there's always a plan B
Part looks like copper. Need a vid on your painting the bumpers. Prep, primer and gloss coat. Brand of spray gun, pressure, tip size. Thanks enjoy your vids.
I didn't do a video on the rear bumper because it was exactly the same process as the front. I did make a video on that one.
th-cam.com/video/LHUrHnftpAU/w-d-xo.html
I don't remember if I talked about this gun in this video. It's a Warwick 904HE, 1.4 tip, pressure depends on material. For example I use 29psi for clear. Less for base.
Thanks for watching!
Reassemble with copper never seize . That valve is called a Shrader Valve (Bicycle Valve) My fix would be to run lines using braided hose and convert to AN fittings . LineX coating would do well and look good
I would not use copper anti-seize on aluminum. Use aluminum anti-seize. Braided hose with an ID of the tubing will be quite large in diameter, and adapting AN fittings to the thermostat housing difficult.
Dissimaler metals
Copper offers more suprestion of oxidation and metal transfer durring tightening.
Aluminum anti seize tends to clump in the thread lands as you tighten.
Many more reasons not to use a Aluminum based product.
@@NowherenotimeThe fittings are aluminum or steel, not copper. Using copper anti-seize introduces dissimilar metals.
Great job. Mine were crushed completely closed 😥 So I elected to get the finned oil lines from Elephant racing. Both lines are just under $1000. But, less money than stock lines. I ordered them through Pelican and used my 10% PCA discount. All in for $800 and change. The lines were excellent quality and fit with just a little tweaking.....just a thought, why couldn't you just cut out the damaged sections and solder in new ones. If it works for the plumbing in your house then why not oil ???....
The elephant lines are very nice and not absurdly priced and they come with bling too.
Plan B was to cut and splice😂
The factory ends are brazed on much like house plumbing.
Solder is a little too soft for vibration, but I see no problem with the correct brazing rod.
@@GarageTimeAutoResto silver solder then
Hello Tom, where did you source the cap and adapter?
Mesa Hose. They are a small race shop in Costa Mesa, can.
Want to borrow mine?
Can anyone tell me if they make oversized intake valve seats for the 356 cylinder head. I purchased a pair of 356 cylinder heads on eBay and found one head to have a loose valve seat. Thanks , John.
I think they do. www.design911.com/Porsche-912-Valve-Seat-Ring-Intake-Oversize-36910420652/prod134092/
Instead of painting, why not try polishing them and turn them into a feature.
Not a bad idea. Porsche should have polished them or painted them bright red so guys don't crush them.
That’s what I did with the set on my 911. Polished the trombone cooler too. Looks great.
Someone stole the oil pipes from my 69S. I can't find them anywhere.
Oh no, thats horrible. Iay have one extra line, but I'm not sure it will fit a 69?
Aeroquip
Arroquip