Fatboy11

New Member
I'm going to be fitting extended brake hoses on my 90 as my next job.

I have bought the Eezibleed system to make it as easy as possible.

I have looked at the bleed valves on the wheels and the part you turn to open them doesn't seem to be very accessible on the rear drums.

Do you need a special tool for these ?

Cheers
 
No special tools required, although I generally use a 6-point socket to crack the nipples before using a ring spanner for bleeding.

Hope this answers your question.
 
Cheers.

I be read conflicting advice about the order to bleed them in. Most info I can find says start closest to the filler tank but I have found some info saying to start furthest away.

Anyone shed some light ? Cheers.

BTW- its a 1986 90 so discs front but drums on the back if that makes a difference.
 
farthest first
asdrc.jpg

from the series repair manual
 
If I'm only replacing the hoses can I get away with only bleeding 1 of the rear drums to push the air out that 1 ?
 
if you change the hose you can bleed that brake only, but if you replace the hose to the axle you have to bleed both of them. supposing you bleed in the direction of the brake (top to bottom), not master cylinder (bottom to top).
 
So when I replace the 1 rear hose I just bleed the air out of the hose on the axle side of it ?
Not bled the brakes on a landy before so how do you stop the flow if you do that ?

Cheers
that was just in case bleed nipple wouldnt undo ,but you slacken pipe press pedal ,hold pedal down tighten union,let pedal up repeat till runs air free,ut if you dont let system run empty bleeding isnt too hard ,clamp flexis to stop leakage or use little bungs for metal pipes while working on system ,order of bleeding doesnt really matter that much,
 
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