I eventually got 'round to doing itAges ago, Malachy wrote:i have abn "eezi-bleed" pneumatic bleed kit (you run it off a car tyre or compressor)i just run it with no fluid in and open a bleed nipple until no fluid comes out this shows me that there is no fluid in the line and only air, i repeat for all 4 wheels.DaiRees wrote:So is there any special process to changing the fluid on these modern cars with ABS, I've only ever done in on old "standard" brake sytems.
My fluid is 5 and a half years old now![]()
Also is there any way to know for sure when the new stuff is coming through, or do you have to rely on the "that must be enough" method?
then i put fluid in the bleed kit and repeat the process but until fluid flows freely out of each nipple.
Job done ;). makes bleeding brakes a piece of cake and a one man job, just make sure that the fluid resevoir on the kit does not run out or you will just start pumping it full of air ;P
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/EEZI-BLEED-BRAKE- ... dZViewItem
only cheap but an absolute godsend when bleeding awkward brakes
regards
Andy

Now while I agree that the method old Malachy came up with above certainly ensures that the old fluid is completely replaced. I don't think I'd do it this way again. I reckon introducing air into the system is a mistake. I did the fluid change yesterday, then went for a test drive last night and the pedal was really soft

Next time, I'd try to minimise the fluid in the reservoir before starting (by running the easi-bleed empty until the level is right), but them fill the reservoir and push the old fluid out with the new in the more traditional manner. That's gotta be less hassle.
