Hi All -
I am getting the oil lines configured for the conversion. Patrick Motorsports sells the below modified 911 oil return hard line for 140.00. Has anyone used this? Is it really that difficult to get a soft line secured so that it does not sag on to the headers?
It seems kinda of pricey - and I am not real happy about having an AN fitting on the one end - but if it works and alleviates future issues, it may be worth it.
Would love to hear any opinions.
Thanks!
Scott S
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I say no, but I am a cheap ass bastard barbarian. I have made my own by cutting a 911 line for the steel tube and then silver soldering a fitting of my choice on it. I used industrial fittings / hose rather than AN.
My last incarnation, was to use the hooped line that runs around the bellhousing off a 911 to move the line away from the HEs and run the return to the oil tank with industrial lines and fittings.
Easy to do if you have the 911 fitting. I silver soldered an AN fitting on as well. Worked for me since my entire system was AN
View from rear...
hmmmmm.... all of those look very veryt clean. Being that I dont have the skill set to do the modification myself (and being that i do not have the 911 line to modify) I think I will save my lunch money for a bit and go for it.
Thanks all-
Scott S
I bought one on ebay being sold by PMS. Bidding started at $35 and I was the only bid. You could always buy the full line from a 911 guy on pelican and then have a shop cut and weld. Maybe same place that does your engine oil cooler unless your using an origional 914-6 cooler. Have the fittings installed with similar threads. Just a thought. Mark
I cut and brazed an original 911 line on my first conversion. That engine didn't use an external cooler.
Then when I went to a Mocal thermo setup and needed AN fittings, I bought the adapter for the engine from Pegasus, then configured a braided line from the engine to the thermostat. It exits towards the rear, then has a nice radius back up to the firewall and stays clear of the headers.
I always use PMS as the 'high price bar' of conversion parts if I absolutely have to buy anything. Through 3 conversions, the only thing I have ever bought from them was the generic electrical plug to adapt my 914 wiring to the 3.2 harness. And I only did that because I wanted it to look like a factory setup.
I got mine from PMS back in '98-'99 and it was only about $75. If I had not been traveling 95% of the time back then I'd have fabricated one myself as well since it's not a difficult piece. You'd spend as much time with the bends as the welding. Obviously once it's installed you won't fuss with it any more.
Good luck
AN 12 & the needed adaptors ain't cheep either, but here ya go.
Lotso room from the headers.
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Summit, jegs, etc...
http://www.summitracing.com/search/Department/Fittings-Hoses/
http://www.jegs.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/KeywordSearchCmd?storeId=10001&catalogId=10002&langId=-1&Ntk=all&Jnar=0&Ne=1%2B2%2B3%2B13%2B1147708&searchTerm=an+fittings
Brit said he found somewhere cheeper than Summit/Jegs. PM him.
I too bought fittings from Summit years back. Both are good outfits to do biddness with.
Always try Racer Parts Wholesale as well, they're often cheaper for the same stuff.
http://www.racerpartswholesale.com/category/Racing
Good luck
Mine looks like JP's picture.
RPH is a good outfit. When I was racing FV, I got most of my stuff from them and I lived 15 minutes from Summit Racing.
I bought all my fittings from a guy on e-Bay. He got them from the NASCAR teams. Apparently, when they blow an engine, they don't use anything over. He would sell the lines with fittings VERY cheap. I used the fittings and tossed the lines for over a 50% savings and the fittings were like new. Don't know if they are still available but worth a look.....
I'm using the same PMS line on my car, but I know I didn't pay that much for it. Of course that was probably 15 years ago.
I paid $300...
http://www.914world.com/bbs2/index.php?showtopic=108579
I like putting the adapter on the case and routing a flex line rearward and then around the engine to the tank.
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