Originally Posted By: glum
I did a vacuum bleed. Again, I don't see any possible way for air to get into the system through the bleeder when doing it this way, unless vacuum is broken. Whatever my mistakes, opening the bleeders too far wasn't one of them.
I'll post this in hopes that it saves someone else from making this mistake...
Where I went wrong was in not keeping the master cylinder filled. "But ah... You friggin moron, you SAID you kept it topped off!" And I thought I did. I found out afterward that the screen Hyundai has under the MC cover works... Let's just say extremely well. So well that it really impedes the flow of brake fluid into the MC. So what I was doing is rushing to the MC, pouring a little brake fluid in, SEEING THE MC APPARENTLY FULL because the level was near the neck of the MC, then running back to the bleeder. But the MC wasn't full--the screen was just making it seem that way because of how slowly fluid drains from the screen into the actual reservoir. Maybe I was rushing more than I needed to, but I really did not want to lose vacuum at the bleeder.
Judge the fluid level from the side of the MC? The MC on my car is not translucent enough to easily tell how much brake fluid is in there, especially once it contains brand-new fluid, which is quite colorless. I still could probably have done this if I had kept a good light on the opposite side of the MC, but I did not realize it was an issue.
So there you have it. Maybe I'll post a follow-up with the final outcome, but I'd rather die than ask another question in this thread.
Yep, totally understand. I wasn't suggesting that you loosened the bleeder too much, that was just my way to ending up with the same problem as you had. Ended up having my dad help pump the pedal and do it the old way.
Two person method is easy and cheap - if you have two people. Most of the time I didn't and ran into the loose bleeder problem when using a Mityvac hand vacuum pump to bleed the brakes.
My young and dumb story: This wouldn't exist with this type of master cylinder, but my Pontiac 6000 had the pop-off lid that exposed two chambers of the fluid reservoirs. I didn't know that when you pump the brakes on that car the fluid would shoot straight up and out of the reservoir. Which is why you were supposed to set the lid back before pumping the brakes. I ended up replacing the master cylinder because I thought it was leaking and that led to me breaking the brake lines and having to replace them too. And of course, that replacement cylinder failed and led to me doing the same thing over again.
I did a vacuum bleed. Again, I don't see any possible way for air to get into the system through the bleeder when doing it this way, unless vacuum is broken. Whatever my mistakes, opening the bleeders too far wasn't one of them.
I'll post this in hopes that it saves someone else from making this mistake...
Where I went wrong was in not keeping the master cylinder filled. "But ah... You friggin moron, you SAID you kept it topped off!" And I thought I did. I found out afterward that the screen Hyundai has under the MC cover works... Let's just say extremely well. So well that it really impedes the flow of brake fluid into the MC. So what I was doing is rushing to the MC, pouring a little brake fluid in, SEEING THE MC APPARENTLY FULL because the level was near the neck of the MC, then running back to the bleeder. But the MC wasn't full--the screen was just making it seem that way because of how slowly fluid drains from the screen into the actual reservoir. Maybe I was rushing more than I needed to, but I really did not want to lose vacuum at the bleeder.
Judge the fluid level from the side of the MC? The MC on my car is not translucent enough to easily tell how much brake fluid is in there, especially once it contains brand-new fluid, which is quite colorless. I still could probably have done this if I had kept a good light on the opposite side of the MC, but I did not realize it was an issue.
So there you have it. Maybe I'll post a follow-up with the final outcome, but I'd rather die than ask another question in this thread.
Yep, totally understand. I wasn't suggesting that you loosened the bleeder too much, that was just my way to ending up with the same problem as you had. Ended up having my dad help pump the pedal and do it the old way.
Two person method is easy and cheap - if you have two people. Most of the time I didn't and ran into the loose bleeder problem when using a Mityvac hand vacuum pump to bleed the brakes.
My young and dumb story: This wouldn't exist with this type of master cylinder, but my Pontiac 6000 had the pop-off lid that exposed two chambers of the fluid reservoirs. I didn't know that when you pump the brakes on that car the fluid would shoot straight up and out of the reservoir. Which is why you were supposed to set the lid back before pumping the brakes. I ended up replacing the master cylinder because I thought it was leaking and that led to me breaking the brake lines and having to replace them too. And of course, that replacement cylinder failed and led to me doing the same thing over again.