Schurkey
Well-known member
{Sigh.}
1. If the master cylinder is tipped up in front, it doesn't matter which way the fluid is traveling--from the reservoir down to the wheel cylinders, or from the wheel cylinders up. There can be an air bubble that WILL NOT be released so long as the front of the master is the high point, and the compensating ports are at the rear and lower. IF (big IF) the master has bleeder screws at the front end...you'd be in great shape. I haven't seen a master cylinder with bleeder screws for so long I don't even think about them any more.
2. Reverse-bleeding uses the bleeder port on the wheel cylinder, to push fluid back to the reservoir. The bleeder port is the highest point of the cylinder. The outlet tube is typically lower. This leaves the potential for an air bubble right in the wheel cylinder. Reverse bleeding MUST be followed by bleeding in the usual way to be successful. As said, it's poor practice to push contaminated fluid up to the master cylinder. Better is to bleed in the normal direction to get clean fluid in the system. Then reverse bleed. Then bleed in the normal direction again to purge the remaining air in the wheel cylinder. Not my first choice. If there's an ABS device in the system, it's suicide to push contaminated fluid through it.
3. The master cylinder is not likely vented to atmosphere. The master cylinder reservoir cover almost certainly has a rubber diaphragm that keeps humidity out of the system. I have heard of Hondas that don't use the rubber diaphragm and which vent to atmosphere, but the source was unreliable and I don't believe it until I see photos.
In MY driveway, major work or an empty system gets pressure-bled. Work at the wheel cylinders gets gravity bled. I don't vacuum-bleed, and I don't reverse-bleed except sometimes I'll push the caliper piston in, which forces all the fluid in the caliper to return to the reservoir. I only do that when I know the fluid in the caliper is reasonably clean, and never with an ABS unit in the system. Otherwise, I vent the caliper when pushing the piston back in. I don't "two-man bleed" because I never have the second person.
There's LOTS of ways to bleed brakes. The only two ways I use on a regular basis is pressure bleeding and gravity bleeding.
1. If the master cylinder is tipped up in front, it doesn't matter which way the fluid is traveling--from the reservoir down to the wheel cylinders, or from the wheel cylinders up. There can be an air bubble that WILL NOT be released so long as the front of the master is the high point, and the compensating ports are at the rear and lower. IF (big IF) the master has bleeder screws at the front end...you'd be in great shape. I haven't seen a master cylinder with bleeder screws for so long I don't even think about them any more.
2. Reverse-bleeding uses the bleeder port on the wheel cylinder, to push fluid back to the reservoir. The bleeder port is the highest point of the cylinder. The outlet tube is typically lower. This leaves the potential for an air bubble right in the wheel cylinder. Reverse bleeding MUST be followed by bleeding in the usual way to be successful. As said, it's poor practice to push contaminated fluid up to the master cylinder. Better is to bleed in the normal direction to get clean fluid in the system. Then reverse bleed. Then bleed in the normal direction again to purge the remaining air in the wheel cylinder. Not my first choice. If there's an ABS device in the system, it's suicide to push contaminated fluid through it.
3. The master cylinder is not likely vented to atmosphere. The master cylinder reservoir cover almost certainly has a rubber diaphragm that keeps humidity out of the system. I have heard of Hondas that don't use the rubber diaphragm and which vent to atmosphere, but the source was unreliable and I don't believe it until I see photos.
In MY driveway, major work or an empty system gets pressure-bled. Work at the wheel cylinders gets gravity bled. I don't vacuum-bleed, and I don't reverse-bleed except sometimes I'll push the caliper piston in, which forces all the fluid in the caliper to return to the reservoir. I only do that when I know the fluid in the caliper is reasonably clean, and never with an ABS unit in the system. Otherwise, I vent the caliper when pushing the piston back in. I don't "two-man bleed" because I never have the second person.
There's LOTS of ways to bleed brakes. The only two ways I use on a regular basis is pressure bleeding and gravity bleeding.

So tonight I should have it installed.