Wherever you can, you should use a tubing wrench, whether it is a crow's foot tubing wrench, or just a normal style wrench with a tubing wrench end.
Those fittings are tight, an you have no options left if you damage the fitting.
As far as what to use, it is always a game of Legos as you try to gain sufficient access with enough oomph to do the job. Use open en wrenches to find what the size is, then use what you learn from that to get the same sized tubing wrench.
If you are removing the hose, and you do not intend to use it again, it can really make things easier to cut the metal line close, then use a socket...
322 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×