July 19, 200619 yr Does anyone here use one of these kits? I never hear people mention these and I haven't tried one, but I am strongly considering buying one. I'm also looking for brand/model/vendor recommendations from those who use the bleeder kits. Thanks
July 19, 200619 yr Not sure if Uberoo has ever bleed brakes before, but do not listen to his advice. The 1man kits out there work great if you dont have a friend handy, i havent used one myself, i usually call a buddy up and have him pump the brakes for me while i bleed them off. -Brian
July 19, 200619 yr one man kit's do work well.. about 10 bucks at any parts store.. I just did my brakes yesterday.. a cinch.. just layed under the car, put the hose over the bleeder valve, opened 1 turn and pumped the brakes 3 or 4 times.. each wheel.. rr - lr - rf - lf.. rllywgn
July 19, 200619 yr I got tired of using cheap one-man bleeders and got one of these: http://www.kk.org/cooltools/archives/001218.php It's expensive ($60) but it works REALLY well. You just hook it up to the reservoir and pressurize it, and it keeps topping the fluid off as you let it out of the bleeders.
July 19, 200619 yr I am a one man brake bleeder with a cement brick. after I tighten bleeder valve, I put brick on pedal, go back to bleeder valve and let it out. Slow, but with some time on my hands and alone in my work, it got the job done.
July 20, 200619 yr The hand operated vacuum pumps work great, too. I use one nearly daily at work, also good for fluid transfer with the larger reservoir container. That ebay pneumatic one has a pretty deceptive ad- they are not quiet, they are actually quite loud, think running a blowgun constantly, and they consume from 6-9cfm of air, so you need a decent compressor to run it.
July 20, 200619 yr I have a small hand-operated vacuum bleeder that I found for $30 at a local hardware store. It works well for bleeding brakes, and it can also work as a vacuum gauge for finding leaks and crossed vacuum lines.
July 20, 200619 yr Im thinking about bleeding mine, I have a new MC and new rear pads on my Loyale, I installed them a few months back, and bled them, If I didnt bleed them "good" enough, would the pedal be HARDER to push, or sink to the floor easier? Mine sinks to the floor??
July 20, 200619 yr Im thinking about bleeding mine, I have a new MC and new rear pads on my Loyale, I installed them a few months back, and bled them, If I didnt bleed them "good" enough, would the pedal be HARDER to push, or sink to the floor easier? Mine sinks to the floor?? it should go about 1/4 to 1/2 down without the car running and will be very stiff. If it goes to the floor, that means you have air/water in the lines and they need to be bled. Another thing a lot of auto owners don't know is that the brake fluid should be changed every other year to keep the yellowish clear look to it. If not, it'll get water in the system, make the brakes spongy, and will turn the brake fluid more brown. It will also deteriorate the metal brake lines and wheel cylinder/calipers if not replaced with new fluid. Cheaper to do it once every couple years then have to go through and replace rusted brake lines, frozen calipers and wheel cylinders.
July 31, 200619 yr Author I have a question: Do I truly need to adjust my brakes (rear drums) before I bleed the system? More importantly, can I adjust my brakes without jacking up the car, or would this be a bad idea because then I won't be able to turn the wheel to see if it is locked by the brake?
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