Kunifer or similar...
Kunifer or similar...
Author
Discussion

alan-87

Original Poster:

394 posts

227 months

Saturday 22nd September 2012
quotequote all
Morning,

Am currently doing a rebuild on my fury and will be replacing both the fuel lines and brake pipes.

For the long runs I want to use hard lines and the car currently has copper, however I've see quite a few people mention using Kunifer lines.

Does anybody have a good source for this? Or anything similar that is up to the job?


Ken555

139 posts

267 months

Monday 24th September 2012
quotequote all
alan-87 said:
replacing both the fuel lines and brake pipes.

For the long runs I want to use hard lines and the car currently has copper
Do not use copper or copper mix lines for fuel, the new E5 and E10 (10% Ethanol) petrol that's coming soon, reacts with copper, better off with stainless steel.

alan-87

Original Poster:

394 posts

227 months

Monday 24th September 2012
quotequote all
Thanks for the info gents. I have found Bennetts to be the cheapest for the cupro-nickel pipe.

Had no idea about the petrol though so thanks for the heads up!

ch427

11,188 posts

255 months

Wednesday 26th September 2012
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you need a dogs bks flare tool as well as standard cheapo ones wont flare the stuff as its so hard

The Black Flash

13,735 posts

220 months

Thursday 27th September 2012
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I used it throughout on my build, and if I were doing it again, I'd probably choose copper. It's a pig to get the flares right, and they're less forgiving, copper is much easier. So I'd say that kunifer is more prone to leaks at the joints, copper in theory is more likely to fracture after long service, though I've never actually heard of a case.

gtmdriver

333 posts

195 months

Thursday 27th September 2012
quotequote all
Just confirmation of what has been said really.

Kunifer is harder to flare and bend and I've never heard of a correctly supported copper pipe fracturing due to fatigue.

Copper is not suitable for use with biofuels such as E5 or E10. You can use stainless steel or mild steel safely though.