Protip for those looking to make their brake bleeding experience incrementally more enjoyable and not in the know: pressure bleeders can be used completely empty.
Almost all pressure bleeders are advertised as needing brake fluid added to them and then pumped to pressure.
This only serves to prevent the cars reservoir from going empty. If you don't bleed out all of the fluid in the reservoir then there is no concern whatsoever.
The benefit is a completely mess free experience; no dripping from the cap, no fluid to dispose of in the pressure bleeder, no excess fluid in the bleeder lines, etc.
Just fill up car res to full, connect cap, pump to 10 PSI, connect catch cup to bleeder ******, open until no more bubbles, close and done. No mess no fuss.
Almost all pressure bleeders are advertised as needing brake fluid added to them and then pumped to pressure.
This only serves to prevent the cars reservoir from going empty. If you don't bleed out all of the fluid in the reservoir then there is no concern whatsoever.
The benefit is a completely mess free experience; no dripping from the cap, no fluid to dispose of in the pressure bleeder, no excess fluid in the bleeder lines, etc.
Just fill up car res to full, connect cap, pump to 10 PSI, connect catch cup to bleeder ******, open until no more bubbles, close and done. No mess no fuss.