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Hydroboost with JIC fittings

bgaller

Jr. Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2018
Messages
155
I feel like this might be a dumb question, but why spend all the extra money for AN fittings when you could just use JIC fitting? There would be no need for costly adapters or special hose, just grab the right length at somewhere like Fleet Farm and add cheaper fittings. Am I missing something?
 

EricLar80

Bronco Guru
Joined
Jun 14, 2001
Messages
2,170
Perfectly fine for power steering use, so go for it. I'm personally not a fan of aluminum fittings for anything fuel or hydraulic related because you don't see aluminum used in a factory situation, and I'm not that concerned about the extra weight of steel fittings. It's definitely cheaper to make fittings from aluminum so that tells you there is a reason the manufacturers avoid it.

Aluminum galls easier, it has lower fatigue life, and it loses strength at freezing temperatures.

I used all Eaton Aeroquip fittings. You can find them fairly cheap online and they are made for aerospace applications so you know they will work great and be without corrosion for many, many years.
 

lars

Contributor
Been here awhile
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Jun 29, 2001
Messages
3,082
Loc.
NorCal flatlands
I feel like this might be a dumb question, but why spend all the extra money for AN fittings when you could just use JIC fitting? There would be no need for costly adapters or special hose, just grab the right length at somewhere like Fleet Farm and add cheaper fittings. Am I missing something?

Practically speaking, AN and JIC are the same thing, and for our purposes, interchangeable. In principle the former are manufactured to tighter tolerances, have rolled threads instead of (possibly) cut threads, traceability on materials, etc. But I've used JIC fittings in high pressure hydraulic systems for decades, and there are plenty of (gasp) aircraft flying around with them without issue.

Not sure what you mean by costly adapters and special hose though.
 
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bgaller

Jr. Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2018
Messages
155
Practically speaking, AN and JIC are the same thing, and for our purposes, interchangeable. In principle the former are manufactured to tighter tolerances, have rolled threads instead of (possibly) cut threads, traceability on materials, etc. But I've used JIC fittings in high pressure hydraulic systems for decades, and there are plenty of (gasp) aircraft flying around with them without issue.

Not sure what you mean by costly adapters and special hose though.

Thanks! I think I'll use the cheaper JIC fittings and pre-made hoses from Fleet Farm.
 

Digger556

Sr. Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2013
Messages
793
Practically speaking, AN and JIC are the same thing, and for our purposes, interchangeable. In principle the former are manufactured to tighter tolerances, have rolled threads instead of (possibly) cut threads, traceability on materials, etc. But I've used JIC fittings in high pressure hydraulic systems for decades, and there are plenty of (gasp) aircraft flying around with them without issue.

Not sure what you mean by costly adapters and special hose though.

Lars nailed it. JIC is used all the time for industrial applications like construction and ag equipment that runs at much higher pressures than a power steering system.

Many alum fittings I've seen listed as AN would not actually meet the AN spec. You can tell they have cut threads, not rolled.
 

EricLar80

Bronco Guru
Joined
Jun 14, 2001
Messages
2,170
I’d venture to guess that all of the aluminum AN “race” fittings have cut threads.
 

Spaggyroe

Full Member
Joined
Dec 9, 2019
Messages
284
All of my hydraboost, power steering, and trans cooler hoses have JIC ends on them.
 

lars

Contributor
Been here awhile
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Jun 29, 2001
Messages
3,082
Loc.
NorCal flatlands
Mix of aluminum and steel JIC fittings on this thing, though more of the latter:

https://cgm.engr.ucdavis.edu/facility/9-m-centrifuge/

Yup, I'm in one of the pix, not saying which though. In any case, never saw threaded connection fail in service in the years I worked there, though all of us were capable of cross-threading them %) Eric, I have to disagree with you regarding the use of aluminum in industrial settings. I've seen lots of them, especially when weight matters. Galling is more of an issue with aluminum, especially if you are making/breaking connections frequently, and that will wear them out even if you are careful.

A Parker engineer told me once that while the specs are looser on JIC, the ones manufactured on US lines were made on the same machines as actual AN fittings, so they were pretty much identical except for material traceability, markings, plating.
 

Digger556

Sr. Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2013
Messages
793
Mix of aluminum and steel JIC fittings on this thing, though more of the latter:

https://cgm.engr.ucdavis.edu/facility/9-m-centrifuge/

Yup, I'm in one of the pix, not saying which though. In any case, never saw threaded connection fail in service in the years I worked there, though all of us were capable of cross-threading them %) Eric, I have to disagree with you regarding the use of aluminum in industrial settings. I've seen lots of them, especially when weight matters. Galling is more of an issue with aluminum, especially if you are making/breaking connections frequently, and that will wear them out even if you are careful.

A Parker engineer told me once that while the specs are looser on JIC, the ones manufactured on US lines were made on the same machines as actual AN fittings, so they were pretty much identical except for material traceability, markings, plating.

That makes sense. Material is easy and rolling threads is more economical at scale.

So basically a domestic "JIC" fitting is better than a race shop "AN" fitting.
 

bmc69

Contributor
Bronco Guru
Joined
Jun 11, 2004
Messages
11,867
I like the aluminum re-useable fittings but usually end up using a mixture of aluminum and steel..crimped and re-usable. And always 37-degree JIC ends.

Sometimes the "bling factor" matters... ;D
 

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Digger556

Sr. Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2013
Messages
793
I like the aluminum re-useable fittings but usually end up using a mixture of aluminum and steel..crimped and re-usable. And always 37-degree JIC ends.

Sometimes the "bling factor" matters... ;D

What's HP and torque on that setup?

Must have been an optional V8;D
 

lars

Contributor
Been here awhile
Joined
Jun 29, 2001
Messages
3,082
Loc.
NorCal flatlands
I like the aluminum re-useable fittings but usually end up using a mixture of aluminum and steel..crimped and re-usable. And always 37-degree JIC ends.

Sometimes the "bling factor" matters... ;D

Bling? What bling..:cool:
 
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