It is a common upgrade to go to stainless braided brake lines for better feel, but how much of this is actually warranted on our cars?
Here are some of my thoughts:
-The factory lines are not simply "rubber", but thick, fiber reinforced lines that probably don't flex that much in reality.
-Factory lines are temperature resistant, flexible, and durable.
-There is huge variation in the manufacturing of aftermarket stainless braided brake lines as it's a very manual process. Quality varies from brand to brand.
-How often do you hear about original brake lines failing vs aftermarket lines leaking, corroding, or degrading in some way? In my experience, OE line failure is zero, and Aftermarket is non-zero.
The reason I was thinking about this is my car has 100k miles and I am rebuilding my brake calipers with new seals and boots. Is the brake line a lifetime item? Is going to stainless lines an "upgrade" or actually a downgrade? I have zero complaints about brake feel or fade for my use case.
Discuss.
Here are some of my thoughts:
-The factory lines are not simply "rubber", but thick, fiber reinforced lines that probably don't flex that much in reality.
-Factory lines are temperature resistant, flexible, and durable.
-There is huge variation in the manufacturing of aftermarket stainless braided brake lines as it's a very manual process. Quality varies from brand to brand.
-How often do you hear about original brake lines failing vs aftermarket lines leaking, corroding, or degrading in some way? In my experience, OE line failure is zero, and Aftermarket is non-zero.
The reason I was thinking about this is my car has 100k miles and I am rebuilding my brake calipers with new seals and boots. Is the brake line a lifetime item? Is going to stainless lines an "upgrade" or actually a downgrade? I have zero complaints about brake feel or fade for my use case.
Discuss.
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