SquareRoot
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2017
- Posts
- 4,372
- Reaction score
- 8,505
- Location
- Arizona
- First Name
- Mike
- Truck Year
- 85
- Truck Model
- K20
- Engine Size
- 350

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If you clip a nail down to a short capital Tee. You can slip the stem of the Tee in a brake line,put the line back in the wheel cylinder and tighten. The nail head blocks the end of the line,so you don't have to repair a line later.Why not just pinch off the line?
Just disconnect rear brakes master cylinder line and put a plug-in till ready to fix and pray the front brakes do their job right.
No damage on my VW Fox to get home from Independence MO. It was truly a jam and a very quick temporary fix to get home when I blew out a wheel cylinder. I did the same thing to a neighbors Ford Ranger,as a quick fix to get him home,I wasn't there when Hunters Dad did the correct repair,but I never heard anything good or bad. As for lighting shoes on fire,not really recommended,but I needed shoes that night 8pm ish no way to get new shoes,so that's what I did. Never did change them after. But these were legitimate use what you have,not much option deals. Not I have days to play on the internet and contemplate how to not fix my vehicle correctly. The Fox I did in a hardware store parking lot,where I bought the nail 100 yards from where I lost my brakes.That's not a bad idea, but you would have to drain the fluid from that chamber or the plug would blow out. But ya, that would work.
I'm curious about that nail idea. Could it damage the cone on the slave cullender? Although I guess that would not matter, since it would be replaced during the brake job anyway.
No damage on my VW Fox to get home from Independence MO. It was truly a jam and a very quick temporary fix to get home when I blew out a wheel cylinder. I did the same thing to a neighbors Ford Ranger,as a quick fix to get him home,I wasn't there when Hunters Dad did the correct repair,but I never heard anything good or bad. As for lighting shoes on fire,not really recommended,but I needed shoes that night 8pm ish no way to get new shoes,so that's what I did. Never did change them after. But these were legitimateuse what you have,not much option deals. Not I have days to play on the internet and contemplate how to not fix my vehicle correctly. The Fox I did in a hardware store parking lot,where I bought the nail 100 yards from where I lost my brakes.
That's what I did.The nail is an imitative idea. So you remove the brake line from the wheel cylinder, install a shortened nail into the brake line, and then reinstall the bake line. That's all there is to it?
Speedi Sleeve on the old axle? Reuse the old seal ? Seems like a lot of work for a bandaid but not sure how to beat a leak without a reseal. I guess no one makes a diff stop leak product.Swapping axles soon, no desire to repair this one properly. Just want a bandaid get me by.
Speedi Sleeve on the old axle? Reuse the old seal ? Seems like a lot of work for a bandaid but not sure how to beat a leak without a reseal. I guess no one makes a diff stop leak product.![]()
If you clip a nail down to a short capital Tee. You can slip the stem of the Tee in a brake line,put the line back in the wheel cylinder and tighten. The nail head blocks the end of the line,so you don't have to repair a line later.
Use a copper roofing nail.I'm curious about that nail idea. Could it damage the cone on the slave cylinder?
Some these fixes may work in a, "get the vehicle home scenario." All of these temporary fixes will only aid in making your truck look like the picture in your avatar.Swapping axles soon, no desire to repair this one properly. Just want a bandaid get me by.