Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Going to get some braided lines made up as a few of mine are corroded and leaking..

Having removed the turbos last night i have a question in regards to the lengths. The water (return i think?) from the split on the block for the rear turbo does a loop before the banjo joint on the turbo and the oil supply for the front turbo does the same.

I assume this is so the pipes are equal lengths due to the different locations the splits are on the block. So on to my question..

Should i get the braided lines made up to the exact same lengths as the standard piping (including the loops) or can i get them made up shorter - not sure if this will effect supply/return to the turbos and possibly cause premature wear?

Anyone who could shed some light would be helpful :(

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/338825-rb26-braided-turbo-lines/
Share on other sites

Going to get some braided lines made up as a few of mine are corroded and leaking..

Having removed the turbos last night i have a question in regards to the lengths. The water (return i think?) from the split on the block for the rear turbo does a loop before the banjo joint on the turbo and the oil supply for the front turbo does the same.

I assume this is so the pipes are equal lengths due to the different locations the splits are on the block. So on to my question..

Should i get the braided lines made up to the exact same lengths as the standard piping (including the loops) or can i get them made up shorter - not sure if this will effect supply/return to the turbos and possibly cause premature wear?

Anyone who could shed some light would be helpful :)

Hey,

I think those loops are to allow movement as the manifolds expand/contract (the pipes are quite stiff).

I replaced mine with braided lines (no looping) when I went to a big single; no problems thus far.

Cheers,

Saliya

I'd urge you to use stock replacment steel lines, not braided. Especially if it's a street car. The braided hose will perish relativly quickly witht he constant heat cycling.

But hey, braided hoses look pretty I guess...

J.

well...... oil cooler lines dont run near the exhaust manifold, turbo lines do

just use that orange stuff with the fibreglass inside it, works wonders for high temp sheilding

they come in different sizes to suit braided turbo lines, breather hosing, wiring looms etc

ive used that stuff on breather hoses that are actually touching exhaust piping, its been about a year and its no where close to burning through

pic:

13_eng.jpg

edit: sorry i just realised your still running your twin setup and i also urge you to run the standard metal lines for more reasons than 1

just make sure you use fresh copper washers, the lines have no kinks or have ever been bent

what i wrote above applys to topmounts but i guess you could put some sheilding on the steel lines too? haha

Edited by snozzle
Oil cooler kits all use braided lines, never thought a braided hose would perish any quicker?

I am more wanting to do this for ease of installation - obviously looks aren't important as you can't see down there once the piping is on!

As was said above, oil cooler lines are not exposed to the same heat/thermal cycling as lines in/on/around exhaust manifolds, dump pipes, exhaust housings etc.

How often do are you planning to remove/install the turbo's???

Measuring and making the hoses will take you hours to do properly... Not to mention the cost.

Also, that orange sheithing is designed as a flame barrier... it's designed to stop a direct flame from penitrating it for a pre-determined amount of time. It dose work to insulate against some heat though.

Cheers

Justin

just use that orange stuff with the fibreglass inside it, works wonders for high temp sheilding

they come in different sizes to suit braided turbo lines, breather hosing, wiring looms etc

ive used that stuff on breather hoses that are actually touching exhaust piping, its been about a year and its no where close to burning through

I used the orange stuff to shield a teflon braided oil feed that ran very close to the exhaust manifold (<5mm clearance) and on the turbo drain covering blue rubber hose. After less than 1000k's I've pulled it all apart and the shielding on the drain looks fine however the hose underneath is charred while the orange stuff has dried out and crumbled on the oil feed with the teflon line also blackened. Don't assume this stuff does anything! Hardline and a good air gap are the way to go.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Placing bets on my stock oem RB25 rods, orrrrrrr........? Β πŸ˜‚πŸ’€ for anyone interested, Insta is : @genuine_rb13 https://www.instagram.com/genuine_rb13?igsh=MTR5dGh4NWh0NHg3cA==
    • Hahahahah, look, your not wrong πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ and thank you brother πŸ™πŸΌ jokes aside, I haven't driven the car in 6+ years and it's like I'm starting all over again, and furthermore the car is wayyyy more powerful and it's characteristics are night and day different now compared to what I remember. So I'm slowly easing myself back into the groove, the car is literally scaring me a bit tbh.....it feels like it has 200hp more than it does on paper and responds like a cammed Ls v8, and-some! πŸ˜… every single bit of throttle pedal travel and input has instant response all the way to the floor, zero flat spots or labouring feelings, it's nuts. Im shooketh, go easy on me hahahaha or don't πŸ€™πŸΌπŸ˜Š Β  Β  Β 
    • If the house has ever been sold before too, they have photos from that etc.
    • I used to do that, but then I got savvy. The benefits of having your phone photos geotagged outweigh the negatives. I just don't publish any photo straight off the phone/out of the gallery/off google photos, etc. If I'm going to use a photo, other than for SMSing to fam, I will always open it on the computer, copy it/otherwise edit it and save down without the original metadata, before using it. For example, posting photos of my engine bay into a thread on here, to show someone a plug or something - I will just screen-cap the section I want to use and paste that section direct from the clipboard into the post. No metadata goes along with.
    • Yes, so it won't work for places with no photos on the net. I would have said that there are no photos of the inside of my house on the net, but....then I realised that my kids' parties would have had bazzillions of photos of the living spaces, kitchen etc put on insta and other shitmedia. So... you can see how insidious it is.
Γ—
Γ—
  • Create New...