Currently looking at the brake lines, surely a system dreamed up by one of the electricians from Lucas.
One page of my notebook now filled with a diagram and lots of notes, most of which will probably prove to be illegible come rebuild time.
Enough photos to impress any teenager with a new smart phone. I'm about to label them all so I know what they are.
Any tips on getting those rusty, crusty old fittings free?
First there are the little clips that hold the brake line to the chassis. Simple clip over the line held down with a screw. Of course, the screw slots are universally full of rust and barely visible. Using a hammer to tap a screw driver along the slot makes no real difference, confirming my belief it's rust, not dirt and no, the force didn't free the screws up in the chassis either. I could just cold chisel them off but would then have to drill out the stub of the screw in the hole.
Then there are the various connections between flexible hose (a statement of original condition, not descriptive of their current condition) and solid hose. On some of these, you can actually see where there are threads

That's right Virginia, on some, there is no visible sign of thread at all, all rust.
Believe it or not, this is one of the good ones.
Finally, you have the connection to the brake drums and T pieces. These I do NOT want to muck up because they'll be used later... I hope. Past experience suggests I'm a hopeless romantic here BUT, is there anyway of getting those bits apart?
For the record. She'll be getting brand new brake lines, solid and flexible, front to rear. Probably nice new master and slave cylinders too, I just haven't looked at what I've got there yet but they'd have to be very good for me to reuse them.
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