My experience has been closer to Marks, I have more trouble with the tube "freezing" to the nut, than I have trouble with the threaded connections. It seems you can always get the threads to turn even if you have to use the proverbial universal wrench (vice grip). I found a way to get past some of those troubles and save the tube and the nut. I remove the caliper or wheel cylinder from the backing plate, and spin it off the nut instead of turning the nut. Then I use a Map Gas torch and heat up the nut, tap a bit lightly with the hammer, spray a bit of Kroil or PB blaster at it and it busts the rust "freeze" every time. This method, of course, may not work for all situations........... Armand Mark Price said... I wonder how well it would do in protecting against corrosion, snapped off bleeders, lines frozen to fittings etc; > Tom Jennings said.... > Teflon sealant would help prevent the joint from seizing, making it more > maintainable. It would seal out water etc and reduce the contact area in > the threads so corrosion that did get in wouldn't have so much leverage > at removal time. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list