I mentioned gravity bleeding,..which technically is the easiest, cheapest,
oldest way.
But since this is a mailing list, and most of us have 'mine as well'
disease...when you're working on the brakes, you mine as well add Russell
Speed Bleeders. I've used them in race cars, trucks, project vehicles and
they've always worked great.
http://www.russellperformance.com/auto/brake/sb-dodge.shtml
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Gersic" <info@zaccaria-pinball.com>
To: <dakota-truck@dakota-truck.net>
Sent: Saturday, September 02, 2006 12:38 AM
Subject: Re: DML: Brake Bleeding
>
> On Friday 01 September 2006 03:01 pm, Jamie Calder wrote:
>> What's the easiest 1 man brake bleeding method
>
> Get a check-valve brake bleeder kit from NAPA. It's like doing the
> tube-in-a-jar method, but the check valve keeps it from sucking the old
> fluid
> back in when you release the brake pedal.
>
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Oct 01 2006 - 01:35:52 EDT