Nafoff
ClioSport Club Member
does your master cylinder have 2 or 4 ports?
4
does your master cylinder have 2 or 4 ports?
It's a cup cylinder then. I think they've given you 2 tees by mistake
It's a cup cylinder then. I think they've given you 2 tees by mistake
]Surely the lines coming into the front wheel wells should have straight end fittings on them? If you are using the standard set up they should run to the brackets in the wheel arch and from connect to separate braided lines that run to the calipers.
Although your kit looks quite different to mine. The only right angle fittings on my lines were for the rear calipers and they went straight through the rear arches to the tee piece in the centre. No bulkhead fittings. Maybe Mitch has revised the kit.
I suspect it is as Rob said. They run to brackets in the arch like oem and then separate braided lines to the caliper. It looks like you have fitted the lines the wrong way round. The ends you have currently in the master cylinder should be the ones that go to the arches.
How clean/empty is the engine bay going? Is it just going to be bare minimum with everything relocated or going back to “standard”?
FUEL LINE ROUTING
So before I finalise where I route my brakelines across the bulkhead I need to decide where my fuel line will come into the engine bay and it would be great to hear any advice.
I am running the fuel line through the interior (passenger side of exhaust tunnel) and it will then go through the bulkhead, with a bulkhead connector - this is where I am looking for advice experience.
I think I have seen people run it through the scuttle panel first and then out through the a/c panel, any readon for this?
UPDATE:
Outstanding parts from Pro-line turned up yesterday along with some sweetners.... I could now look at finalising routing.
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I must say I am glad I am being OCD about this and checking everything rather than just going gung-ho at it. It seems the brake line saga continues slightly.
I did a bit more looking around/research tonight before and whilst I was working on the car about the rear lines (arch side) as it was playing on my mind that the wheel may catch them. I was going to run them as so:
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Just holding this is place and looking at it I was pretty convinced this was going to foul the wheel. What better way to test...
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Sure enough... that isn't going to work at all.
I looked up various other peoples executions and found the images below, it appears everyone seems to have something different - some have no bulkhead fittings (allowing them more line in the arch and the ability to clip) and then the ones that do seem to have 90deg fittings in the arch (which I think would have worked in my case) but I have neither.
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My execution to this possibly is to run the lines behind the rear shock and up into the boot floor (seen below). I will have to give enough space that when the rear beam is in travel it won't hitch it - but does anyone think this is a bad idea for any reason?
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Running it this way also means that inside the lines won't be able to sit flat, well at least not at the rear bulkheads. Really interested to her anyones thoughts on this?
I've run mine fuel lines pretty much as you suggest here. Along the passenger side of exhaust tunnel and then up into the skuttle just beside the washer bottle. They then run across to the drivers side in the scuttle and out of the AC panel before going to the fuel regulator mounted in front of the off side turret.
Using AN6 line there's just enough space to do this (I'm also using a return line) but it was too tight to get the lines further over to the off side to come through the other side of the turret. (if that makes sense)
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Mine run around the front of the shock and even with coilovers I haven't had any rubbing. Although I don't have the bulkhead fitting which does allow the line to run a bit tighter.
Not sure I would want those fittings sticking up in the boot floor like that. If you change them for elbowed ones it would work though.
I've run mine fuel lines pretty much as you suggest here. Along the passenger side of exhaust tunnel and then up into the skuttle just beside the washer bottle. They then run across to the drivers side in the scuttle and out of the AC panel before going to the fuel regulator mounted in front of the off side turret.
Using AN6 line there's just enough space to do this (I'm also using a return line) but it was too tight to get the lines further over to the off side to come through the other side of the turret. (if that makes sense)
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Depends what set up on the engine you're running. I'm on ITBs so I can control fuel pressure with the return line as I have a high pressure pump on my swirl pot assembly. If you're using the standard intake and Throttle body you'll either have a regulator on the fuel rail (early 172 set up) or there is a regulator in the lift pump assembly in the tank.Do you advise a regulator?
Proper amateur question but what does it actually do?
Depends what set up on the engine you're running. I'm on ITBs so I can control fuel pressure with the return line as I have a high pressure pump on my swirl pot assembly. If you're using the standard intake and Throttle body you'll either have a regulator on the fuel rail (early 172 set up) or there is a regulator in the lift pump assembly in the tank.
Looking great Neil, I have obviously now signed up to this forum and plan a dedicated section for any help/advice needed for any of our products.
As you know though..I'm also available any time via telephone.
Watch this space
I must admit I though all phase ones had a return line and regulator on the fuel rail. That being the case you will need a FPR because your in tank pump won't have one.I am running full phase 1 fuel set-up (tank, pump etc) which means only the one line. Engine wise it is ITB's and mild cam's
I must admit I though all phase ones had a return line and regulator on the fuel rail. That being the case you will need a FPR because your in tank pump won't have one.
If you are running a non return system then you should have the regulator in the pump but you will just be limited to the 3bar it is set at.
No I don't think it will. 3 bar fuel pressure is all you need anyway and the dead head system helps to prevent fuel surge too.Running a Jenvey fuel rail to go with the ITB's wasn't an issue previously (when the line was under the car) should this make a difference really?
No I don't think it will. 3 bar fuel pressure is all you need anyway and the dead head system helps to prevent fuel surge too.
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Different view of it
Mine might be the Volvo part tbf looking at yours.
I’d get a nice aluminium spacer made to space the top alternator mounting out a bit.
Unless you have the wrong alternator for that mount maybe? You using a cup one or air con one? I know the mounting point on the is different.
I think that may be a better idea rather than just using a couple of washers. Luckily my neighbour is an alloy machinist, it just may cost a fair bit.
Yep cup alternator
Did the cup racers run the cup alternator?
Somebody on that thing ‘facebook?’ said the cup racers used different block mounts and different alternators