brake line fittings | FerrariChat

brake line fittings

Discussion in '308/328' started by jkg2101, Sep 26, 2025 at 7:21 PM.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

  1. jkg2101

    jkg2101 Karting

    Jan 25, 2015
    184
    New York
    hello all
    as I finish up dissassembly of my 82 GTSi, i have found a couple of the brake fittings to be so stuck that a couple of the fittings are being mauled by my tools to get them broken loose. it looks like the lines have not been touched since new. The metal lines look to have bubble flares, not inverted flares. although the heads of the fittings are metric (11mm), the threads seem to be identical to loose line nuts i have from previous projects, which I though were english, not metric.

    Main question is, does anyone know the proper thread for the fittings for the hard lines if I order? i am guessing the ones close to the wheels are 10 x 1.0 metric threads? If I make up new lines, i think i can use standard 3/16" metal line. the metric equivalent is 4.75mm.

    When i restored my Pantera, I changes all the fittings from bubble to inverted flare, and make all new lines up myself. it was quite a project. Does anyone know if anyone makes pre-made metal lines for the 308? the usual vendors (inline tube and classic tube) do not appear to.

    also, are bubble flares more likely to leak when re-assembling? should I not even try to re-use the old lines, on the ones where i did not destroy the nuts. (In all honesty, i have only messed up 2 nuts)

    justin
     
  2. Ehamilton

    Ehamilton F1 Rookie
    Rossa Subscribed

    Jun 13, 2010
    2,771
    Durham, NC; USA
    Full Name:
    Eric Hamilton
    They are bubble flares, 3/16 line is good, bubble flares do not leak on reuse unless they have been previously overtightened. It’s worth some effort not to mess up the short S-shaped lines right at the calipers, the tight curves make reproducing these without kinking difficult.
    It’s hard to tell 3/8-24 from M10x1.0 by looking at them (but you will strip threads and ruin stuff if they’re mixed up).
     
  3. jkg2101

    jkg2101 Karting

    Jan 25, 2015
    184
    New York
    thanks
    makes sense
    3/8 is just about 10mm, and 24 threads per inch is just about 1mm per thread
    i wonder if the fittings are made differently or if they are the same, but labeled differently when sold. regardless, i'll buy the metric fittings because it's not worth taking the chance
     
  4. Ehamilton

    Ehamilton F1 Rookie
    Rossa Subscribed

    Jun 13, 2010
    2,771
    Durham, NC; USA
    Full Name:
    Eric Hamilton
    NO. They are not the same.
    It is really unfortunate that they are close enough to be confused, it’s enough of a trap for the unwary that FedHill (a vendor that I highly recommend) even has a tech note on “Common crossthreads”.
     
  5. yelcab

    yelcab F1 World Champ
    Consultant

    Nov 29, 2001
    13,679
    San Carlos, CA
    Full Name:
    Mitchell Le
    no, 3/8-24 and 10x10 are absolutely not the same.
     
  6. johnk...

    johnk... F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Jun 11, 2004
    11,280
    CT
    Full Name:
    John Kreskovsky
    Take one of the fittings to ACE Hardware. You can check the thread size there. Or just buy an M10 x1 and a 3/8 x24 nut and see what fits. :rolleyes:
     
  7. Ehamilton

    Ehamilton F1 Rookie
    Rossa Subscribed

    Jun 13, 2010
    2,771
    Durham, NC; USA
    Full Name:
    Eric Hamilton
    The 3/8-24 will screw in smoothly until it feels ready to be snugged up, and then when you do it will strip threads.

    This is an 82 GTSi original brake lines…. They’re gonna be metric.
     
  8. EDoug

    EDoug Formula Junior

    Apr 19, 2005
    282
    Southern Florida
    JKG, this is what you need to produce fittings that work -eak free (DIN bubb-e f-aring too- and metric M10 x 1.0 bubb-e f-are nuts). See pic be-ow. The DIN too- produces a f-at backside to the bubb-e f-are which mates to the f-at surface of the bubb-e f-are nut. (Sorry for using a "-" because my keyboard just broke and some keys are not working.) I had to do the same repair on my 1986 Testarossa, but unfortunate-y I cou-d on-y find the DIN f-aring too- overseas. EDoug


    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  9. LostAussie

    LostAussie Formula Junior

    Jun 13, 2013
    728
    Piemonte
    Full Name:
    Stuart
    All of your Ls have fallen over. That's a new one.
     
  10. jkg2101

    jkg2101 Karting

    Jan 25, 2015
    184
    New York
    thanks for the advice. i have a fancy flaring tool - i will take a closer look. i have used it for inverted flare fittings, but never did the bubble flare, although i think the bubble is the first half of the inverted flare, but not sure.\

    anyway, thanks for the suggestions everyone. i feel more confident now
     
  11. EDoug

    EDoug Formula Junior

    Apr 19, 2005
    282
    Southern Florida
    [QUOTE="jkg2101, post: 150277331, member: 173783"... i have a fancy flaring tool ... i have used it for inverted flare fittings ... i think the bubble is the first half of the inverted flare ...[/QUOTE]

    JKG, I am gad that you posted this
     
  12. EDoug

    EDoug Formula Junior

    Apr 19, 2005
    282
    Southern Florida
    JKG, yes your inverted flare tool's "first half" creates a bubble, but the "second half" DOES NOT create a flat surface to mate to the bubble flare nut's flat sealing surface. Your inverted flare tool second step will create a cone shape and that is why it cannot create the proper seal against the bubble flare nut flat seal, and ultimately be the cause of a leak. Look closely at the pic of the DIN tool schematic and you will see how as the punch is screwed into the brake line end it will create the bubble inside the punch end, and then the flat sealing surface. Look close at your inverted flare tool schematic and you will see why your second step cannot. Hope this helps. EDoug
     
  13. jkg2101

    jkg2101 Karting

    Jan 25, 2015
    184
    New York
    Thank you for the thorough explanation. My hydraulic flaring tool set has both metric and standard fittings and the bubble flaring has just the details that you are describing to make it flat on the back and bubble flared at the connection. It makes perfect sense to me now that you explained it
     

Share This Page