Thanks Guys..... I understand! photo of bubble flare fitted to old pipe.... I have discovered that if I create a double flare then remove the pipe and place it in the tool the other way up it creates a bubble flare..... now that is sorted I just have to "re-do" the pipes I had already made!!!!!! better safe than to find out I have no brakes lol.
Your last photo, Terry, shows the true Murena brake pipe flare and flare nut, and it is the metric flare, which you would expect from a European made car. The No.1 (convex) and No.2 (concave) flares are the older English brake pipe end flares and use a different flare nut to the metric one. The metric flare nut has an almost flat end shape and the flare on the pipe as can be seen in your photo, has a 'bubble' on the very end but the other side where the flare nut contacts, is virually a right angle and flat to mate with the flat end of the flare nut. The angle on the flare cone is also slightly different to the English flare. So strictly when making brake pipes for a Murena, you should be using the metric flare nuts and metric flaring tool for the pipe ends. In fact, if you are re-using the original flare nuts, then since these are the metric type, then putting a No.1 English bubble flare on the pipe would result in a mismatch. Fortunately, as the copper or copper-nickel pipe is relatively soft, as you tighten the flare nut up, it should re-shape the end enough to seal. However, you really should be using the correct metric flare system.
So the true answer to your heading 'Bubble or Double' is: Neither! It should be a metric flare.
Roy