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-   -   UR Q Fuel lines needed. (http://www.classic-audi.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=27499)

Chrismcnaz 30-08-13 06:51 AM

UR Q Fuel lines needed.
 
Hi guys,

I'm after a set of fuel lines for my 85 UR Quattro. Ideally I would love a set of new original ones but am having trouble tracking them down (hens teeth spring to mind).

Does any one have a spare set i could buy or any idea of what to use for replacements? I didnt really want to go down the road of having to bend my own from scratch out of kunifer, but now I'm thinking that I will have to.

Cheers

Hoyle 30-08-13 08:24 AM

I'm sure the fuel lines are NLA. I went down the kunifer bending route, it was tricky on axle stands, but do-able. Some members have used plastic lines too - see mrpat's 80q thread.

Hoyle

matt_c 30-08-13 08:51 AM

Yep been NLA for the Ur Quattro for a couple of years now.

Daveymaclad 30-08-13 08:55 AM

I got mine all redone, in metal, by the garage I used in Bournemouth. They just bought a few lengths of metal pipe (graded for fuel lines!) and worked it into shape. Worked a treat and all in all wasn't too expensive!

Hoyle 30-08-13 09:16 AM

Mine cost about £35 for 25ft of 5/16 kunifer, then just used basic bending and flaring tools.

Had the old ones off and new ones on within a day.

lefthooker 30-08-13 09:29 AM

Remove the old fuel lines, take them as they are without bending them to a half decent garage/workshop and they will make new ones, probably out of kunifer, refit and forget.

Hoyle 30-08-13 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lefthooker (Post 323003)
Remove the old fuel lines, take them as they are without bending them to a half decent garage/workshop and they will make new ones, probably out of kunifer, refit and forget.

It's easier said than done. I had to bend mine at the front where they head up (in my case over the rack and under the battery tray - early type with the master cyl on the pass side). It's difficult when the car is on axle stands. If ramp access was available, it'd be 10x easier!

lefthooker 30-08-13 10:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hoyle (Post 323004)
It's easier said than done. I had to bend mine at the front where they head up (in my case over the rack and under the battery tray - early type with the master cyl on the pass side). It's difficult when the car is on axle stands. If ramp access was available, it'd be 10x easier!

A ramp of course would make life easier, but sufficient height is quite easy to achieve with decent axle stands. Roger Galvin has already outlined things that can be done to make access and removal of fuel lines easier in the earlier thread on this subject.

The lines can be removed intact particularly given there's no battery tray to contend with, and even unbolting the steering rack and moving it out of the way slightly would help. A decent workshop can bend new pipes using the old ones as a pattern.

It's not a nice job, but done right in the first place and it need never be done again.

Roger Galvin 30-08-13 12:45 PM

Lefthooker & Hoyle are quite right it is do-able, even on axle stands, as Lefthooker points out I did comment quite extensively on this topic in the last week or two. However, takes about 4/5 hours on the ramp depending on how co-operative the car is. Genuine replacements are NLA, but were priced at about £75 plus VAT each so even if you find someone other than me who still has some they are going to want about £200. Cranwell, Lincolnshire is only 68.1miles from The quattro Workshop so get it on a trailer. I'll stick it on the ramp and make it some new pipes in 5/16th cunifer. The overall cost won't be substantially any different and you wont have to buy a flaring kit that you may never use again, spend a day grovelling on the garage floor covered in fuel and as always you get my personal guarantee the job will be right!

Hoyle 30-08-13 12:49 PM

There's an offer not to be turned down :tup:


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