No, I mean breaks, as in the brake line broke when I bent it. Wow, talk about living on the edge... I actually drove this thing. The brake lines in this American were very rusty, so I pulled them all out. The branch to the right front just snapped off at the tee, I couldn't even see white steel in the break (brake) but it musta been there they held pressure. I just bent up a bunch from straight lengths (no cockeyed brake switch nonsense to plumb up). I need a new flaring too, my old crappy KD kit really sucks. I'll probably look for a good quality one that does only 3/16" as that's all I ever double-flare. I'll keep the old kit for oddities. By the way, the 64 master cylinder is an exact replacement for the 63 EXCEPT the outlet fittings on the 63 are 1/2" or 5/8" nuts with 3/16" tube. I'll just do what I did on the other 63 -- use brass reducers. I measured the pushrod socket depth and diameter, same. Bolts right up. 1963 part: $220. 1964 part: $27, new, not rebuilt. Man was it easy to bend tube for this thing! Everything so far about this car is easier to work on than the newer stuff I've owned. The rear brake line took some care to get from the master cyl to the right "frame rail" but after that it is almost straight. So I now save almost everything, including one set of bad 9x2.5" front drums and shoes (!), for correct-part comparisons and cores. Glad I did. Suuure looks like you could *almost* put 2/5" drum+shoe on the 2.0" backing plate and hub. Only two things probably stop this: the top center shoe rest post height (too short) and wheel cylinder (hits center of 2" shoe, 1/4" off center for 2.5" shoe). Turns out, the hub is the same! To keep the brake drum working curface centered, the 2/5" drum has a center section (that fits on the hub) that is below flush. The 2" wide drum has the center section flush with the edge of the drum workin surface. I pulled the fronts to look at, I will depopulate one side and place the 2.5" shoes to see where things line up. This is just a curiosity. I'm gonna drive the perfectly-good 9x2" setup and switch to disks probably they come up for replacement in a year or so. And if I stay really cheap-skate, a 9x2.5" drum setup is not exactly rare or expensive. AEROKROIL -- I know I sound like a broken record, but that damn stuff removes anything. There's an element of improvability ("squirt on this bolt and it came right off!") as sometimes even the worst-looking bolts come right out anyways, special juice or not -- but since i've used it I have NEVER broken a bolt/stud or buggered a head in this car or any other. On this car I removed in the most ordinary way: * front brake line flare nut to flex hose, both sides * truly ancient exhaust manifold studs (big flakes of rust) * rear brake line flare nut to rear axle flex hose * frozen brake bleeders * bolt that holds the oil filler neck to exhaust manifold * exhaust hanger bolts more stuff I can't recall Exhaust manifold bolts are notorious. All three came right out. All I could reach with the spray was the end that was flush with the back of the tapped flange, that was enough. Once I got it out the rust extended 4 - 5 threads down, and it still came out. I took them out with a box-end wrench. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list