solid build and so many great wheeling trips! you are living right sir
I have learned a ton here on the forum and I enjoy it as much as possible...thanks for the compliment...
solid build and so many great wheeling trips! you are living right sir
Looks like a hell of a lot of fun! On my list but a long drive.
Manual transmissions suck!
I love mine, always have...
If you ever get to drive a similarly set up jeep as yours with an automatic, you’ll see the advantages they offer.I love mine, always have...
If you ever get to drive a similarly set up jeep as yours with an automatic, you’ll see the advantages they offer.
Shame on me...why is it we all seem to wait until the last minute to get ready for a trip that occurs the same weekend of each year?
I am leaving for the Rubicon Trail Thursday AM, started going thru the Jeep to make sure all good, packing, etc. Welp, I am now remembering that my rear ARB locker was cycling on and off in SandHollow this past Spring and upon further investigation, I find this:
View attachment 541459
Rat fuck! I know ARB has a repair kit for this line but no way it gets here in time before I leave for my trip so...I have heard of people soldering the holes in the line in hopes of repairing the leak. In talking to a pal of mine, he suggested using a copper sleeve instead. Great idea!
I ended up buying a small 3/16"OD copper brake line for $8, cut a chunk off of it, had to ream the inside diameter out a little so it would fit over the ARB line and cleaned up the broken line with a tube cutter:
View attachment 541461
Soldered the sleeve onto both pieces of the airline, reinstalled the line using new fittings from the ARB repair kit I had on hand:
View attachment 541462
View attachment 541463
Jacked up rear end, turned on compressor, turned on rear locker and it holds! locker engages and disengages as it should. Now I just need to button up the rear diff, add gear oil and I should be good to go.
For the real fabricators and gurus out there, have you heard of anyone using this technique to repair an airline and it actually works? Or will I be disappointed because it will fail? Lastly, if it does work, should I run it this way until it gives again or should I get a new ARB seal housing kit and make it proper?
Shame on me...why is it we all seem to wait until the last minute to get ready for a trip that occurs the same weekend of each year?
I am leaving for the Rubicon Trail Thursday AM, started going thru the Jeep to make sure all good, packing, etc. Welp, I am now remembering that my rear ARB locker was cycling on and off in SandHollow this past Spring and upon further investigation, I find this:
View attachment 541459
Rat fuck! I know ARB has a repair kit for this line but no way it gets here in time before I leave for my trip so...I have heard of people soldering the holes in the line in hopes of repairing the leak. In talking to a pal of mine, he suggested using a copper sleeve instead. Great idea!
I ended up buying a small 3/16"OD copper brake line for $8, cut a chunk off of it, had to ream the inside diameter out a little so it would fit over the ARB line and cleaned up the broken line with a tube cutter:
View attachment 541461
Soldered the sleeve onto both pieces of the airline, reinstalled the line using new fittings from the ARB repair kit I had on hand:
View attachment 541462
View attachment 541463
Jacked up rear end, turned on compressor, turned on rear locker and it holds! locker engages and disengages as it should. Now I just need to button up the rear diff, add gear oil and I should be good to go.
For the real fabricators and gurus out there, have you heard of anyone using this technique to repair an airline and it actually works? Or will I be disappointed because it will fail? Lastly, if it does work, should I run it this way until it gives again or should I get a new ARB seal housing kit and make it proper?
I’d definitely buy a new seal housing incase you have an issue. I don’t think I’d pull the diff as long as it’s working.
It is the same repair as bazillions of copper water lines are put together with in millions of homes, it won't fail.
Instead of a sleeve,a swedging kit like either of these work to open up one half to slide on the other for soldering. I was leary of the rotary ones at first but they are easier to use than the ones you hammer.
I use them all the time on connections with hundreds of psi and high temp swings
View attachment 541493View attachment 541494
Those don't go small enough. The ARB line varies between 1/8" and the metric version of that or 3mm near as I can tell. But, we are only dealing with a 100 PSI so just about any sleeve you can get over it works fine.
I ended up using a 9/32" drill bit to ream out the 3/16" OD brake line...very small....
You are very talented. 3/16" = .188, 9/32 = .281
