Hey Larry,
I have a single-disk 550 on which I just replaced the brake lines. I too kept the splitter/pressure switch block in the middle and eliminated the steel line at the caliper. Here is how I had my lines built:
- straight banjo at the MC, 20-inches, 90-degree banjo at the inlet of the splitter.
- 20-deg banjo, no offset at the splitter outlet, 27-inches to a "type 520 fitting" at the caliper.
I did a 90-degree at the splitter inlet due to interference with the headlight bucket.
What the hell is a "type 520 fitting"? It's a part number from Spiegler for a fitting that screws right into the caliper. It's not a banjo fitting, rather a male 10x1.25 threaded end. I went with the 520 since I didn't want to drill out and tap the deep innards of the caliper socket to allow a standard banjo bolt to thread in all the way. I was also thinking that the 520 would be less likely to leak, tho a properly fitted banjo is pretty leak resistant if the seat at the caliper is clean.
I don't know if you have a short banjo bolt or already have had your calipers tapped to the bottom. To see is your calipers are ready for a standard banjo bolt, remove the steel line from the caliper and thread in a banjo bolt with a banjo end on it. If the bolt bottoms before the banjo seats, you may need to tap your caliper or go with something like the 520 fitting.
The 520 does come straight out of the caliper, so if you are really wanting the line to come in at an angle, then your banjo idea is good way to do.
Oh, and it wasn't your wording, it was that heavy Boston accent!
