To set the ball rolling I have two pairs of (recently untested) walky talky type personal radios which I believe can be used as a set of four and are very handy in certain circumstances!!
PM me if they interest you!
Points for honest response but the brass neck of that attitude!Jay-Bruce wrote: 26 Mar 2023, 02:12 I ripped the face off someone who returned a rake of nearly new tools looking like he'd dug them out of a puddle in a scrapyard, including breaking the gauge on my pressure bleeder, he replied "Ah but, I just treated them like my own and abused the $H1T out of them" - he's now a former friend.
admiral51 wrote: 26 Mar 2023, 18:58 This thread has just reminded me of something i need to return to a member on here that was loaned to me over 18 months ago![]()
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Colin
Great description. I have PM'd you.Jay-Bruce wrote: 28 Mar 2023, 17:49 I forgot to measure the spanner size of the mandrel hex, but it'll be in the region of 19/22mm (3/4" / 7/8"), wind in the mandrel screw till it bottoms out, undo the locking screws, remove the top die block, extricate pipe end from mandrel screw, slide on rubber, poke pipe in port, run up pipe nut (Pleiades do nice stainless ones)route your pipe to the other end, rinse repeat to flare the second end.
I've gone into "teach your granny to sook eggs" levels of details in the above, but the process is no different from a conventional brake pipe on-vehicle flaring tool, just a special tubing and differently shaped dies/mandrel. The Locking screws are Grade 5 1/4" UNC and have a 7/16" AF or 11mm spanner size, so care must be taken not to lose or break them.
Thanks Jim but question directly related to Jay primarily because he's had a bad experience in the past with a 'former friend' so just wanting him to rest assured that the tool is in good hands and it will be cared for.CitroJim wrote: 29 Mar 2023, 12:19 Roger, if you need an guidance to use this tool when you come to do the job, please do feel free to give me a ring and I'll talk you through the job![]()