An Coolant Crossover Conversion
#22
The pipe tap cuts and removes metal from the outermost threads on the head giving the fitting more threads to compress and seal, so you're opening up the threads from the outside - in.
Imagine a perfectly round hole. Now put a cone in that hole, upside down, to plug it. There is only a very small amount of material between the two surfaces sealing it.
Now take the same hole and chamfer the edges slightly, then put the cone in. There's far more surface area to do the sealing. That's the premise behind NPT threads - the more thread engagement, the tighter the seal.
Basic plumbing.
Imagine a perfectly round hole. Now put a cone in that hole, upside down, to plug it. There is only a very small amount of material between the two surfaces sealing it.
Now take the same hole and chamfer the edges slightly, then put the cone in. There's far more surface area to do the sealing. That's the premise behind NPT threads - the more thread engagement, the tighter the seal.
Basic plumbing.
#24
Ok I know it replaces the steam pipe/banjo bolts, but still why do it? I was able to get new banjo bolts at the local stealership.
Not knocking it, looks good and way better than stock - just does it have any particular "benefit"?
Not knocking it, looks good and way better than stock - just does it have any particular "benefit"?
#25
Not particularly. Most people do it because the stock tube gets bent up, lose the bolts or seals, strip the heads, etc., and the cost of this conversion is cheaper than all of the replacement OEM parts.
#26
I'm curious, it's easy enough to get a brass fitting with 1/4 npt on one end, but what are you going to? I'm guessing a 90* el with 1/4 npt on one end and ? on the other and then to a hose barb somehow? I considered 1/4" npt 90 with a compression fitting on the other side and using some hard line...