My little swagloc tube adapter has worked great and the clutch feels great...at least to my standards. And it was so cheap and easy, it kind of puzzles me why people go other routes that cost so much money.
To each their own though
I'm not bashing the swagloc method. It's what I chose to use. I tried repeatedly to cut through the braided line formed into the slave cylinder that came with my transmission. And after gashing the underlying plastic line 5 or 6 times, I didn't consider that *MY* installation would be reliable. I didn't trust my ability to pull it off.
Plus, I needed to splice a 6MM plastic line into a 1/4" hard line, and the sizes were not quite close enough for me to want to shove them both into either size of compression fitting. And I didn't have luck finding a good conversion fitting. Adding the cost of a 1/4" fitting plus a 6MM fitting plus the NPT coupling to put them together, I weighed the $70 cost of the GTO slave against the higher chance of leakage. I decided that *I* was not able to put them together reliably, and so the $70 was worth it. I know that professionals put fittings on those hoses all the time, and I don't fault anyone for going that route. But I recognized my limitations and I did not ever want to be changing a failed coupling or a nicked line that burst 6 months later.
I also considered buying the fancy $20 adapter to convert from click-connector to AN fitting, and then I would have needed to buy more adapters to convert AN to bubble flare.
Looking back, I spent lots of money's worth of time weighing and trying different options, and the actual dollars spent are no longer a significant portion of the total project cost. Any of these options can work, and I definitely would have used a compression fitting had I been using a non-braided line. I probably would have kept trying had I been able to get the 1/4" fitting tight. But that was clearly not going to work as I had originally planned it.
@ZooMad75, you have different limitations than I do, and you definitely have better tools. You'll probably be just fine with a compression fitting. Especially if you're starting with a GMT400 line that isn't braided. You could also go to a hose shop and buy exactly the right line with the correct fittings. You have lots of options.
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