Hey, no problem, i've done loads of pipe fitting of all kinds over the years for work and pleasure and i've also seen a lot of awful installations too.
If you havent done it before try this template method:
Be really careful taking the old pipes off, do it one at a time.
Clean nuts with a wire brush and WD40 before undoing.
I find pipe on a roll will straighten nicely if you unroll short (5" or so) lengths onto a table flattening it as you go.
Cut a short piece of pipe, measure it and form a flare then measure it again. This will tell you how much pipe you lose per flare.
Check what angles you have on the pipes you are replacing then cut short lengths of pipe and make templates by bending those angles using a bender and marking the start and end of each bend.
Start by roughly measuring a pipe from the car.
Cut a length of new pipe that is a few inches longer than you need.
Use the templates to mark where the first bend should start leaving an extra inch on the first one and then bend the pipe, marking the start and end of the bend.
Use this method to measure from the end of one bend to the start of the next.
Do the same for all the bends until the pipe is roughly the same as the original.
Carefully tweak by hand if neccesary.
Mark where the end of the first flare should be and then add on the measurement you took earlier.
Cut the pipe, slide on the nut and form the flare.
Do the same at the other end and then fit the pipe on car.
Copper/Cuni brake pipe is really easy to bend and you can tweak by hand at final fitting to suit.
Repeat until finished.
Good luck
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