> The second looks a lot better, but it's > leaking (maybe thread sealant would fix it). Sad to say, the threads are not involved in the seal. The nut only presses the flare against the matching "cone" in the female part. If you're using one of those inexpensive flarin tools (I do) that is two bars with wingnut clamps, you need to spend a lot of very careful time gettin everything PERFECTLY square. What I do is, gently clamp the line so it stays in place, but not tighten. THEN clamp the two bars exactly parallel with C-clamps. THEN eyeball it carefully to make sure the end of the tubing is EXACTLY square with the bars, and check 90 degrees apart. Only then tighten the crap out of it. (Mine bows slightly right where the tubing is; I use another C-clamp to press the two bars together better. THEN when you put the flare tool on, that straddles the two bars. Note that if the bars were not made exactly parallel, the cone on the flare will be cocked and make a cocked flare. Practice and experience does help, but it is a very frustrating too. ANother option is to get a pre-flared line that's too long, and carefully make loops to take up the slack. I've searched, and found no tool between ther $30 piece of crap and the $300 real tools that do everything. I just want to flare brake line! > Another gotcha is we put the carb together wrong, and the fast idle > screw doesn't touch the cam plate. Gotta pull the carb and put the > plate on correctly - right now it idles wide open (yikes!). The fast > idle screw doesn't touch the plate at all. (That's usually how everyone learns that sort of thing. Chances are you won't do it again :-) Good luck for a Saturday cruise!!! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list