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J. Clarke[_4_] J. Clarke[_4_] is offline
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Default Not looking good for the Bosch Reaxx TS

In article MPG.330dfddc4a9f96c998aa11
@news.eternal-september.org, j.clarke.873638
@gmail.com says...

In article jkd7ac5ofpak6pfr3a3km07p019nfaqir5@
4ax.com, says...

On Tue, 14 Feb 2017 20:10:38 -0500, "J. Clarke"
wrote:

In article XnsA71C551315151dougmilmaccom@
213.239.209.88,
says...

"J. Clarke" wrote in
:

It doesn't matter what the brake lines are made
of, a 16 year old vehicle should have them
inspected and replaced as necessary.

You're expecting magic materials to take the
place of proper maintenance.

Nonsense. Metal brake lines are not a "maintenance" item, even on a 16-yo vehicle.

They are or should be an inspection item.

In more than forty years of doing the vast majority of my own maintenance and repair, I've
had to replace a corroded brake line exactly once: last March, on the Dodge truck which
my wife and I bought new shortly after we got married -- in 1985.

That you did your own maintenance and repair
does not mean that you did it right. Did you
perform every maintenance item that the service
manual specified?

I can tell you from years as a mechanic, including dealer service
manager - and the ONLY "maintenance item" to do with brake lines is
changing fluid on a regular basis (every 2 to 5 years, depending) and
inspecting the rubber hoses for cracks or bulges.


That's not what my owners' manual says. However
I have never seen a dealer service department
actually DO all the maintenance items that are
called out in the book.

By the way, are you a certified mechanic, or
just a pointy-haired boss?


Sorry about the triple-post--my newsreader kept
crashing and I thought it wasn't sending.