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3/8'' OD Aluminum Fuel Line Hard Tube, 3003 Grade For Refrigeration Tubing, Fuel Oil Pipe, Metal Gas Line Compatible with Tube Nut Couplers, Sleeves & 37 Degree Flared AN Fittings 25FT

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$21.80

$ 9 .99 $9.99

In Stock

1.Size:3/8'' 16ft Kit


About this item

  • 【Size Details】OD: 3/8 inch (9.52mm). Wall thickness: 0.035 inch (0.89mm). Coiled length:25FT
  • 【Feature】Easy to bend, with hand or a bender,stable quality. no kinks or bends or breaks or fear of cracking, and malleable as you would expect from decent aluminum lines.
  • 【Use On Various Projects】Ideal for plumbing fuel systems, oil systems, and air systems. Compatible with fuel, oil, gasoline, diesel, ethanol, E85, etc.
  • 【Installation】Need to install the tube nut on the tubing first,followed by this tube sleeve.Then use a 37° flaring tool to flare the end of the coiled aluminum tube.Professional installation recommended
  • 【Function】The nut is used for the conversion of the hardline and the fitting,the sleeve is used to fix the aluminum pipe and prevent it from moving, and the sleeve is sealed with a 37 degree and an outer flaring of the aluminum pipe.


3/8'' OD Aluminum Fuel Line Hard Tube, 3003 Grade Aluminium Tubing For Refrigeration Tubing, Fuel Oil Pipe, Metal Gas Line Compatible with Tube Nut Couplers, Sleeves & 37 Degree Flared AN Fittings 25FT


B. Katz
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2025
Perfect for my Jeep build project. Easy to fit where you need it. Seems very durable and looks really cool. Very pleased with the fuel line.
Olivia Becker
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025
I used this 3/8'' OD Aluminum Fuel Line Hard Tube to make a boost reference line for my injection pump. Easy to work with and flare with correct tooling.
TheLastAndTheCurious
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2024
I got this aluminum hardline for a project I'm working on. I'm NOT using it for fuel since the ethanol in the fuel will mess with this soft aluminum. Also if I run actual E85 that's going to be even worse on raw aluminum.This tubing straightened out easily. You can bend it again a few times before it work hardens and gets weak. For that same reason, get some 3/8" insulated clips to secure the hard line from vibrating. Single flaring worked well, I used a dedicated tool for that.
Corey
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2024
This is good quality aluminum tubing.It's packaged well, so there were no dents or kinks when it arrived.Appears to be properly annealed, as i bent well without work hardening right away.I haven't tried the AN fittings, but it's great that they're included.
Concerned Consumer
Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2024
Used the tubing for a fuel drain line on a farm tractor. Appears to be made of good material. Easy to shape into place - straightened the first 10 inches of the line, and then ran the remainder through a straightening tool. Fitted the line with AN6 fittings and flared the ends to 37 degrees. Installed line - pressure and leak checks good. The provided adel clamps are very basic - but did not expect too much, given the price-point. Will find use for this type of line for other projects as well.
Mr68K
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2024
This is not metric tubing passed off as standard, the OD measure .37-.375" and the ID is .312"The fittings are really sweet looking, the anodizing is perfect. Bends easily, it sure is a 3000 series. Test beds done with a cheap simple bender made awesome kink free 1.5" radiuses.I don't see any thing wrong with this set and will go on an automotive heater project shortly.
Cnote
Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2024
Worked for replacing full size chevy truck fuel lines on vortec engine
Ima Outlaw
Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2024
I'm using this for an EFI Sniper 2 conversion on my hotrod. I haven't finished the project yet to see if the connections will hold ( I don't see why they wouldn't.) The tubing does bend easy. I used a plank of wood on the floor and gently unrolled the tubing as I held the tubing against the edge of the plank, and it came out very straight, no need for a tub straightner. I used the Harbor Freight flaring tool to make the flare. I saw a YouTube video where a guy used the back side of the HF tool (not the side where you do the flaring,) using the double flar puck, put the tubing a puck length (up to the shoulder of the puck) on the flaring tool, then putting the puck in the tubing and gently using/turning the tool (the thing you turn to make a regular flar,) to push the tubing down, you can bead the tubing for a hose. And the tubing can polish up to a chrome like finish.