I cut the pipe leaving enough of it to slide a hose over it and clamp it.
from my research, it's the return line, so not under any pressure(very little is any)
I left a longer length of the pipe just in case a single clamp wasn't enough, and a second clamp may have been needed.
On the hose itself, I cut at a point along the pip section removing the clamped hose, and used some good quality fuel hose at that end as well.
A few thousand klm later and the single clamp holds it just fine.
Once you cut the pipe, you just need a long enough (deep socket) .. making the job 'easy as'.
To cut the pipe I used a bolt cutter, which obviously compressed the pipe a little, but was easy to get it back into shape. Filed the cut end to remove all burring so it didn't damage the hose when fitting up, and whilst remodeling the pipe, made an ever so slight flare as well. Not much, just enough to make it hold the hose a bit better once the clamp was done up.
I can go get a photo if you like, but I don't really want to remove the hose or fitting today .. almost certain to start raining the moment I start removing something! 
(D2 TD5 is my brothers, but I have it here ATM doing some other stuff too)
One of the little tweaks I've had in mind to do, to neaten it all up, is to redo the head fitting with a quick connect end, and make one up for the FPR fitting as well.
So the plan is to eventually fit a hose with both ends having quick connects, and remove the hose easily from the FPR to the head(instead of using the hose that comes with the entire FPR assembly.
The return line is another example of lazy arsed, half witted engineering by LR people.
That 'pipe and hose' really needed to be a quick connect hose from the beginning.
Arthur.
All these discos are giving me a heart attack!
'99 D1 300Tdi Auto ( now sold :( )
'03 D2 Td5 Auto
'03 D2a Td5 Auto
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