I've heard good things about the one above.I have had good luck with the power bleeder, but you do have to buy adapter for your MC. I used it on 2 cars that had dry (restored) systems, And one foreign (Porsche) car.
On an old jeep I used the old MC cap and drilled and tap to hook up the unit. You just pump it up and start bleeding. You need to check the reservoir on each wheel then re-pump.
You do not have to bench bleed new MC.
But like always follow the instruction
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I've tried vacuum bleeders, check valve bottle bleeders, almost everything imaginable.
In my experience, nothing works as good as a second person who knows what they're doing.
Nothing.
I pride myself on my ability to do "two man jobs" with only one man, but this is the exception for the rule.
yeah, last time i needed help bleeding it took 3 weeks to get someone... speed bleeders are great for working alone
I have one of those. Seems there is NO other option if you have an early Ford/Lincoln/Mercury Hybrid vehicle. The regenerative braking on those cars is a contraption at best.I've heard good things about the one above.
View attachment 1912886 and a tube on the nipple to a container. You leave them in.
Taija Rae... She was an actress in the early 80sWho's that in your avatar?
My wife knows how to communicate while bleeding brakes, and also can flat tow, either pull or be pulled.
Was a selling point.
I have the exact same setup cept it's into a old ice tea bottleThis is mine- connect to bleeder, open bleeder, pump pedal slowly a few times, close bleeder. The fluid in the bottle keeps air from sucking back in.
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