What could have caused this seemingly spontaneous failure?

That is a really cool clamp design which basically operates in the same safe manner (designed to prevent over-tightening) as a fuel injection clamp but without a screw. I'll see if I can find some at my local store.Odoyle wrote:Seems like an odd thing to happen, considering you just put in a new hose. Did the lower tube break off? Or did the hose simply slip off? Earlier this week I removed my brake reservoir to clean it out and replace the hoses (by the look of it I replaced mine with the exact same hoses your using) while installing a new master cylinder. I decide to use the O.E. clips I took off the old hose along with a special clamp similar to that used on the rubber boot on the rear brake compensator and it has worked great. No leaks... so far. I purchased them from my local True Value hardware store for a few cents each. Now I'm not saying these are the holy grail for this job... but it has worked for me.
You are actually the second person to suggest that, which is a reasonable theory, but I really don't think that was the proximate cause. The hose is not stiff, and I provided so much slack, I don't see how the stress could have, or should have, made the nipple fail.azruss wrote:how stiff is the new hose. may have put enough side pressure on the nipple to bust it off. How soft is the plastic on the new tank.
For what it's worth, the reservoir that broke was "Made in Yugoslavia". So, while it may not have been New Old Stock, it was certainly New Not-Young Stock, seeing as how it came from a country that no longer exists.SpiGirl75 wrote:Ours broke in exactly the same spot using the same blue hose. We installed it in our 75 that we are restoring and hadn't even driven it.
We bought a new reservoir and the plastic clips that hold it in the bracket from Spiderroadster and it looks to be a different brand than the one that broke. We'll see how it goes.
Very interesting. Was it the nipple closer to the engine that broke, as mine was?SpiGirl75 wrote:Our reservoir that broke was also made in Yugoslavia. We hope you were able to get an exchange. We were told our installation was less than stellar and offered free shipping on another one.
Not sure of the manufacturer of the one we bought from SpiderRoadster.