brazing an air con ally pipe ? not worth the hassle when there are so many breakers around
You can't bodge an A/C line. Go to an A/C specialist or replace it.
Cool, when you fit the replacement pipe blob plenty of grease under the clip and round the area of the clip... The pipe will sweat when the aircon is running and if the pipe is anywhere near steel (Clip?) then the alloy will rot... It's a trick that the motor industry learned from Rand Lover
good scheme if youre stuck with a fitting , other less messy option is to get hold of a rubber covered p clip, pennies from most decent motor factors.
Quote from: daved on October 28, 2011, 09:34:38 PMgood scheme if youre stuck with a fitting , other less messy option is to get hold of a rubber covered p clip, pennies from most decent motor factors.Used to fix hundreds of ally aircon pipes now it's just a hobby if folk bring me the pipe... Many manufacturers used the rubber insulated clips but the water still bridges between the two metals over the rubber (Especially where they are in a position to collect a bit of road salt) and electolytic corrosion goes wild.... Remember the Peugeot 306?Funny you'd have thought that a RandLover would have been better protected given the ammount of oil they leak from every orifice...
Ha! Aircraft are built to a standard..... Cars are built to a price...
The metal (aluminium?) pipe which runs from the bulkhead on th epassenger side, along the inner wing and then connects to the condenser at the front. On mine, where it is clipped to the inner wing just about halfway along its length, it has a very small leak. I cant see it unless i use a UV light but its there and its losing my gas pressure over a two or three day period. Does anyone know if I could use a compression joint and just cut the bad bit out and rejoin it?If so, as its a half inch diameter pipe, do you know where I could get the aforementioned compression joint and secondly, what sort of pressure does this pipe run?Any help appreciated.