I have a mityvac tool also and have never been able to successfully bleed with it. My Brother-in-law manages a Goodyear store and they have a pressure bleeder which is where I got the idea. On my FIRST antique car (41 Plymouth), I just could NOT get the brakes bled. He held the pressure cap on the old MC lid and I cracked the bleeders. We dumped about a gallon of fluid on the floor but it worked when nothing else did. KerryP Patch panels fabricated Pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx dte.net/57imperial Imperials -- 50 Limo, 57 roadster, 61's, 64, 68 Convert, 73, a 66 300 and a bunch of lesser marques ----- Original Message ----- From: kenyon wills <imperialist60@xxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2003 12:17 PM Subject: Re: IML: bleeding brakes (by vacuum) > That garden sprayer (pressure) idea is ingenious and probably cheaper than > mine. > > I used a mity-vac vacuum hand pump. It's a relatively cheap grey plastic > hand-squeeze tool with a vacuum gauge on it. It looks like a really > distorted squirt gun from one angle. I bought 15 feet of clear 1/4" > diameter "surgical" hose at the hardware store. > > I looped the hose over a rafter (you can do it over the car's roof with > something heavy set up there holding it up) and connected the hose to a > bleeder screw at the farthest wheel from the MC and drew a vacuum. I then > opened the bleeder screw, having topped off the MC to the brim beforehand. > The vacuum pump is at the other end of the hose, and should be at hand > level if you cut the hose to the appropriate length, but that isn't > crucial. > > When the bleeder screw opens, the vacuum sucks fluid from the MC through > the line into the clear hose. When you are no longer seeing bubbles > coming out and it's just solid fluid being pulled out, you're done. > I did this on a dry, new system and it worked great to pull entirely new > fluid the whole way with me topping off the MC occasionally. > > Repeat with each line from longest (farthest from MC) to shortest and you > should have 100% fluid and 0% air. The bonus on this one is that if you > pinch off the end of the hose at the bleeder as you remove it, you can > retain the fluid in the clear hose and dump it back into the bottle or > dispose of it if it's not new and clean. No drippy mess this way. > > When the vacuum pressure diminishes and everything settles down, the open > valve can't leak and let air back in, as it has the fluid that came out of > it in the hose still still connected to it, and the bleeder screw is > closed before the hose is removed. I mormally bleed things once more a > month after changing fluid just to make sure, but usually don't find that > anything changes, hence my faith in the method. > > This is the exact opposite mechanical principal from Kerry's pressure > system, but works the same. I liked being able to see the solid fluid > climb the hose to the doorsill from the wheel just to be certain, but > that's just me. No bubbles are the main indicator. > > > -Kenyon > > > --- Kerry Pinkerton <pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hugh, there is a relatively simply process for pressure bleeding your > > system that will ensure NO air is in the system. Get a small pump up > > garden > > sprayer. (I think I gave 12 bucks for mine at Home Depot) Find a extra > > master cylinder cap, drill a hole in it and put some type of hose stem > > on it > > that you can adapt to the garden sprayer hose. Fill the garden hose > > with > > fresh brake fluid and give it a few pumps. Then start cracking the > > bleeder > > valves. The fluid will be pushed through the lines under pressure and > > no > > air should remain. > > > > This is easy with two people but do-able alone. It doesn't take much > > pressure. > > > > I did this on my 54 so I could remote fill the master cylinder which was > > under the fragile carpet. I just put a vacuum cap on the end of the > > modified cap when finished. > > > > KerryP > > Patch panels fabricated > > Pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx > > dte.net/57imperial > > Imperials -- 50 Limo, 57 roadster, 61's, 64, 68 Convert, 73, a 66 300 > > and a > > bunch of lesser marques > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: Hugh & Therese <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx> > > To: Imperial Mailing List <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2003 12:17 AM > > Subject: IML: bleeding brakes * > > > > > > > * Read with a cockney accent for full effect > > > > > > Intending to dive the Imperial on Sunday I backed it out of the garage > > and > > > washed it. I cannot remember the last time I washed it, so it was > > kind of > > > nice to reacquaint my knuckles with all its nooks, crannies and > > crevices. > > > Things got a little hectic and I ended up not using it and it stayed > > on my > > > short but steep driveway until around 10:00 PM. Oh, you can only > > imagine > > my > > > joy when I restarted it to move it back into the garage to find I had > > no > > > brakes. I did when I left the garage, which is level, of course. > > > > > > The friend who helped with the brakes last year, of whom some of you > > do > > not > > > have the highest opinion, and I had discussed the still less than > > acceptable > > > braking I was getting from the car. I have only tried to bleed and > > adjust > > > the brakes once since last year. No air was found, but a one or two > > shoes > > > needed to be adjusted, now the new shoes had seated. We concluded > > there > > was > > > indeed still air in the line and that what we would have to do is jack > > up > > > the rear end for a few days and let the bubbles rise through the fluid > > of > > > their own accord so we could try to expel them once and for all. > > Yesterdays > > > impromptu experiment hopefully indicates that the idea just might > > work. > > So, > > > when rain has moved out of the forecast, and both Mark and I can find > > some > > > time in our crowded schedules, I will park it outside, nose down, and > > see > > if > > > the trapped air cannot be coaxed out of the system. > > > > > > If we should fail I do not know what to do next. Since two > > professional > > > shops and countless hours of amateur labor have not managed to resolve > > the > > > cars poor brakes, I am left with a rather obvious but unpalatable > > > alternative. > > > > > > Hugh > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- > > > This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please > > > reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be > > > shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the > > > Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm > > > > > > > > > > > > > >