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Are 22-year-old brake lines unsafe?
- masospaghetti
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I really just want a safe vehicle, i sometimes have passengers whom i'd rather not kill b/c of brake failure.
Thanks
-J
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- OKC_Kent
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I, on the other hand, feel fine using my hoses from 1978. But my metal ends are not rusty, and the rubber is not cracked. How safe am I really? :whistle:
Oklahoma City, OK
78 KZ650 B2 82,000+ miles
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- masospaghetti
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I'm concerned b/c there is little margin for error on a motorcycle. I don't have much money to spend on this so I need to be selective on what I replace...my rubber is not showing any deterioration yet, just rust on the metal parts.
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- KZQ
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- Walking Behind the Corn May Not Be All That!
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The answer is to check the condition of the tires and hoses often on any recently resurrected bike. At least till you feel you know the bike well.
KZCSI
www.KZ1300.com
Riders:
1968 BSA 441 Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 W3, 1976 KZ900, 1979 KZ750 Twin, 1979 KZ750 Twin Trike, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 2000 Valkyrie, 2009 Yamaha Roadliner S. 1983 GL 1100
Projects:
1985 ZN1300
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- Pterosaur
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I'm mostly concerned about sudden catastrophic failure at high speed with little or no warning. Will there be symptoms before the lines give out?
Well, they won't fail just going down the street - they'll fail when that soccer mom pulls a louie and forces you to toss out both anchors with everything you've got.
And that's the problem.
You can visually inspect them, you can wiggle and shake them, you can test them to the limits of common sense in the driveway or on an empty street. But you'll never develop the kinds of pressures a brake line will see in an emergency until you're in an emergency.
So the question becomes - is that the time you want to find out?
If you have the slightest doubt about them - replace 'em. Cheap peace of mind at the price.
If there's anything more important than being able to go fast when you want to - it's being able to stop when you NEED to...
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- ambergrismooon
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Death's name is reported to be Mort. Mort says "keep the old lines!".
Same as ...My tires are all chequed up! Should I still ride on them?
Sure! But please allow us to take out a million dollar life insurance policy on you before your next ride.
Or ...My tires are Old Flintstones (apologies to Firestone) do you think they will last?
They MIGHT last! You MIGHT too! Repeat #2's answer...
20 people might say "NO!". 3 people might say "Hell yes! I been riding on steel & canvas for 3 years!", but it's the 1 or 2 who CAN'T answer you that SHOULD be listened to.
I wonder about a 22 year old condom?
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- georgeha
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I know I didn't want to take a chance on the 30 uear old lines on my 400. I bought new fittings and stainless lines from J&P and Dennis Kirk, it only cost me about $50 altogether, and I feel much safer.
George
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- galaxian
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1977 KZ1000A1, 1979 KZ650 C3
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- OKC_Kent
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maso,
I know I didn't want to take a chance on the 30 uear old lines on my 400. I bought new fittings and stainless lines from J&P and Dennis Kirk, it only cost me about $50 altogether, and I feel much safer.
George
$50 !! I'm not doubting you but that seems very low, how did you pull it off? I need to check into this, I thought replacing the front lines and fittings would cost much more... for that money I wouldn't hesitate to replace everything.
Oklahoma City, OK
78 KZ650 B2 82,000+ miles
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- RonKZ650
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321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- Pterosaur
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I feel perfectly safe with 30 yr old lines on all my bikes.
That's cool. If you trust 'em that's peachy
I've never in my life heard of a brakeline exploding causing an accident, even in magazines where you have to read and devide everything they say by 10 generally.
Of course they do. They blow all the time - especially on rattletrap beater cars from the 70's and early 80's - that co-incidentally use the same type of ribbed neoprene hose found on 70's Kaws and Hardleys with hydraulic shoe-type rear brakes.
I've personally seen one of those blow on a bike - my brother was on a '72 Super Glide when it happened. Right into a guardrail.
I've seen Shade-Tree Mfg., Inc. steel lines, kinked at the factory fail.
I've seen a bad run of braided steel aftermarket lines get recalled for popping like party balloons.
If you're depending on magazines for comprehensive information ans advice on all things safety related, you're missing a LOT.
Expect $300 or more to replace lines if you go Kawasaki, or maybe aftermarket would be cheaper? Now that "Would" worry me.
Okay.
Likely as not, a 30 year old brake line won't fail.
But $300's worth of road rash is a spot about the size of a quarter.
It's really just a matter of peace of mind.
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- RonKZ650
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321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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