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Your cart is empty.This master brake flaring tool kit covers single, double, and bubble type flares. Kit contains flaring bar, arbor press, adapters, tube cutter, and debarring tool - all in a hard case.
Joel Taylor
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2024
Tool is of excellent quality and all machined surfaces are finished well. The carrying case is fitted, so all of the dies and tooling is neat and organized. The tool easily made up the flares I needed to replace the 5/16" fuel line on my 1931 Buick. I used copper nickel tubing. Suitable for flaring lines made of softer materials, would not use on stainless lines. Tool is best used mounted in a vice. If using to repair a line on the vehicle, it is difficult to use. I was able to clamp the bar to the frame rail to help out.
Frank
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2023
Makes good flares but the cutter is a little flimsy and probably won’t last long. The other pieces seem ok. This is perfect for the at home dyi person fixing their own vehicle. I work in a dealership and this got the job done but won’t last long for professional use. Going to get snap on next.
Captain Mark
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2022
This is my experience. I am not a professional mechanic (I am an engineer), so it's application to your specific problem or my method may not be correct for your application.. The results for my application were excellent executed as I describe. You must choose appropriate tools, lube, tube, cleaners, fittings, and components for your specific application. There are safety regulations that must be investigated and followed to be legal. My federal marine fuel line regulation required a min. of .029 tube wall, so Cupro Nickel .028 lines locally available at auto parts places could not be used, I ordered appropriate approved copper line here on Amazon.I remade a damaged copper 5/16" fuel line with 5/16" soft copper tube (.032 wall) and 1/2" 45 degree brass flare nuts. Results were excellent. Completed flare was actually slightly more uniform than the original. This set of flare tools appears solid and sturdy if used correctly. In the photo above is a freshly made flare right out of the die (before I dusted off a stray burr sitting there loose with a copper cleaning pad. The pipe was cleaned and burr removed immediately after. Always inspect and clean off stray dust and particles before connecting.For those who have difficulty making good flare joints, the secret is all in the careful preparation. Once it's prepped with care, the rest goes quick and easy.Here's thoughts to help:1. Keep the tool clean in its case when not in use and dirt and grit free. Get the right tube for the job that complies with regulations. Where possible, make sure you work on a straight section. Install the flare and nut before bending if working close to the flare. Use a good bender. I purchased one here for 5/16 tube. Follow directions for the specific tube; most guides say to anneal hard copper tube with a torch. Soft is easier and good to go without annealing.2. Cut your tube to length using the tubing cutter gently to minimize distortion. Do more turns less pressure. Avoid a saw, but at least do not cut crooked!3. Chamfer the tube with a good chamfering tool. The rigid tool I purchased on Amazon is particularly good in my test: "RIDGID 29983 223S Stainless Steel Pipe Reamer, 1/4-inch to 1-1/4-inch Inner/Outer Reamer". It has many small cutting faces vs just a few on cheaper ones; so makes a very uniform smooth cut.4. Now you can clamp it up being very particular to follow published guides for the stick out past the tool. Get a good tight uniform hold. Double flare sticks out exactly the height of the die piece. Look at good instructions or watch a good video.5. I now lubricated the double flare die. I used some high zinc motor oil I had handy for my marine engine. Tiny residue won't harm a gasoline carburetor. For brake lines, use only an oil compatible with your brake system or be prepared to clean it perfectly in solvent. Extreme pressure grease seems a good choice for hard to flare tube only if you thoroughly solvent clean after. The lubricant decreases the force necessary to flare smoothly. Avoid getting it on the clamp surfaces that grip the tube. If you do, clean with suitable solvent. On thumbscrew threads lube is fine, where friction is king holding the tube, don't use it. I tend to clamp tight, which reduces risk of slipping, which does leave a slight harmless pattern on the tube wall.6. Once lubed, well gripped, and perfectly concentric, it will produce a good solid flare. I had no trouble going slowly and making repeated good flares. Good means a good clean uniform seating face with a nut that pulls it in straight.7. Once the edges are chamfered slightly inside and out, check each end visually and remove any burrs with a copper cleaning pad. Point down while you do this so nothing falls in. Leave nothing to cause trouble. As an extra precaution, with no compressed air handy, I dropped a string through the tube, and tied a small piece of copper cleaning pad on, and pulled it through. This clears loose flakes or burrs out of the tube.8. Practice is a good thing. I made a couple of test double flares. Including one I lightly coated with a dusting of spray primer and snugged up in the filter inlet a little; then rotated back and forth several times. I then unscrewed the nut and inspected the mating faces to ensure they were mating properly over 360 degrees. You can see the impression because of the coating. There are special testing dyes sold for this which are more appropriate. I cleaned the surfaces with acetone after testing to leave no residue.9. Basically that is the way to success. Prep everything carefully. Make sure everything is straight concentric and smooth. Lubricate dies appropriately after clamping. Clean your work, check your work. Finally, after installing, leak check under full pressure. (use a flare nut wrench designed for tubing too...this minimizes the risk of rounding off or distorting a nut when tightening. Flare nut wrenches grip the nut face all around except for the tube gap, not just two faces). My creed is check your work at every step, and then do a final test. Every once in a while you still get a surprise when something just doesn't behave even though you thought you nailed it.That's it. For my app, with copper tube, set worked perfectly and still looks brand new on completion, so that's an A+.
Ownentry
Reviewed in Australia on March 26, 2021
This flare tool kit is made poorly.1. Double flares come out on an angle due to flare bare machined on an angle.2. Bubble flares are flared in old obsolete SAE type and not DIN as in modern cars.Overall kit looks good but performs poorly. I used it on Copper Nickel lines.I'd expect better with this kit being made in Taiwan. :(
Kris W.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 6, 2021
Unfortunately, OTC reflects stereotype that expensive kit will have good quality. Tried on 3/8 tube, absolutely awful to perform. With perfectly prepared deburred and chamfered tube, with square face and multiple attempts - consistenly getting skewed flare, in the same place. May be good for 3/16, nothing above that. Returning as no difference between this kit and cheepo...
Keddco
Reviewed in Canada on December 13, 2019
I tried to do some standard and bubble flares with some Princess Auto cheapo kits, and got everything I paid for. This set was 3 times the money, and did 100 times the job. You get what you pay for, but you don't have to spend a ton on tool truck stuff for it to work great.
Andy Politz
Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2017
The shipping company had some delay on the road. Since I had a long weekend available to replace my brake lines, I couldn't wait for the shipping issue to resolve itself.I bought a more expensive set at NAPA. I'd resolved to send this one back.Gathering all my Popeye-ness, I doggedly made up endless double flares. After a while, the NAPA set began to crack at an eye, admittedly, getting a lot of stress.In time, I just had to return the locally purchased set.By now, this set had arrived.NIGHT and DAY better set.The threads are finer. You don't need quite so much Popeye.The flares seemed to come out cleaner (given that I was new to double flares and I'd gained experience and had developed a bit of a method).The transitions from one process to the other was easier.This unit is better designed, appears to be better materials and had no breakage.The tube cutter isn't as good as any of the Rigid cutters I have. I ended up using one of my own.Something I realized, it is often stated that the tube ends need to be cut square, de-blurred on the inside of the tube, beveled inside and out.It should be easy to cut square with any of the tube cutters.Practice, if you're new to double flares. But, a wonky flare may not be due to a out-of-square cut. I believe you can get the same result if your outside bevel (I filed mine) is not even all the way around. If you have a segment of the tube end with a thicker wall, after you bevel it, I do not think you can force it square in the flaring process. Just too much material.Watch the end thickness as you bevel the outside. Get it pretty close to even all the way around. Then de-burr/bevel the inside.Great set, gerat price. Nice case.A total winner.My truck even stops now!
Jordan Klonteig
Reviewed in Canada on February 28, 2016
I have nothing bad to say about this set. I bought it for bubble flares only, but I figured the capability to the other types was worth the investment instead of buying multiple singe kits. I should mention I only used CuNi line, which is much softer than steel, so I can't comment on how this kit works with that - but for my time/money I would only use CuNi since it's so much easier to work with. I read many other reviews that recommend beveling the outside of the tubing slightly with a file - it did seem to make a difference in the smoothness of the bubble itself. I completed 9 flares with at least half of them being on the car - only had one that leaked initially but tightened it up and it stopped. I was a bit nervous spending a bunch of time redoing a brake system only to find out that the bubbles weren't good enough, but everything went well. While brake work does take a little time (usually more spent dealing with rust and rot issues than anything else), you can save a ton of money vs. a $60/hr shop rate to install $50 worth of parts. I thought the value was good - there are definitely more expensive kits, but this one seems solid and heavy, and is a reasonable price point for the backyard mechanic.
David MCA Powell
Reviewed in Canada on August 13, 2015
Comprehensive kit that will form many types of flare; it worked well on steel pipe. The cutter formed a good end and the swage action was good but obviously needed lots of lubricant to ensure the best result. Quality is good and case is tough. If you don't need all types of flare the individual kits are probably better value. I liked this one as everything is in a single case and on vehicles with copper nickle pipes it does an excellent job.
Aman Patel
Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2014
This tools included with this kit are robust and work well. I had previously purchased the OTC 4504 Stinger ISO Bubble Flaring Tool Kit (ASIN: B0015PMZMU) and it sub par. This tool makes nice bubble, single, and double flares.If you are using Copper/Nickel lines, don't use too much pressure with the deburring tool because it will gouge the line. It does work okay if you are careful. I use a countersink bit on a cordless drill instead of that tool and think the bit does a more consistent job.I actually tried to make bad flares (e.g. no lube, no deburring, slightly crooked ends, etc., but it was difficult.This is a very nice kit for a DIY'er. Buy it and be happy!
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