A ha ha ha ha ha, not so fast self. They are not the same. Had a sunny 50° day today, so it was time to finish up the brake rubber program. Of course the painted master cylinder was bled and installed as well. Now since I am eternally curious, as part of the gravity bleed for the front half, I took note of which part went down and.... [drum roll please] the half closest to the booster lost level. I'm confused as to what I had originally said and without looking to see, I'm just going to amend any brain flatulence I may have broadcast.
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The paint still hasn't fully cured. Note to self, don't use engine paint in the PNW winter unless one is fully prepared to heat up the article to evaporate the solvent in a timely manner. Lol.
So there you go. The three hoses are here
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These are Delco branded hoses, and both fronts required a bit of massaging to get the area for the banjo bolt to sit in the proper aspect off the caliper to not run into suspension components. Not impossible, but ffs, why couldn't they get the bends right before hand. Lazy crap, but I made them work. Also, the passenger side fitting at the frame end was clocked wrong with the one way hole. Managed to change the control arm clamp positioning enough to make it work, but there's still a weird dip in how it is routed. Time will tell if the hose will accept the odd torsional, I don't like it.
In case you've never looked inside a front brake hose, here's a view of what you're missing. Easy to see how one can plug with little effort.
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It looks way smaller in real life. Never clamp a rubber line when removing a caliper, way too easy to crush the rubber and ruin it.