y5mgisi
1 ton status
Makes no sense to me. All seems pretty good. I think at this point, if it was my truck, I'd swap to soft pads, a k5 master, and have them power bled by a different shop.








You are bench bleeding correct?
They should only have about an 1/8" of travel by the time they are done bench bleeding.
Question:
When Chris and I were bleeding the brakes, I was the one pumping. Every time I pumped, I could see a little gush of fluid come up in the reservoir.
I have bent the mc rod once.
Are your rubber lines in the back looping higher than the bleeder. You may have a small amount of air in the line.
Just one more thing it just doesn't sound like air in your lines. MC can leak internally
Looks correct
First, I honestly cannot tell from the pic of the caliper, is the bleeder above the line or below?
Straight up and above
The MC with the deep hole, is what I was calling a manual type.
Ahhhhhh
First, with the engine off, hit the brakes a few times until all the boost is gone.
Let the truck sit a few seconds after that to let everything equalize.
Then press firmly on the brake. What happens? What should happen, is a small movement, then a hard pedal. You should be able to stand on it with almost no further movement.
I suspect yours is going to go way down.
May even be spongy.
If so, then that fluid is going somewhere. If its not inflating rubber lines, compressing marshmallow brake pads, or bypassing the pistons in the MC, then its compressing air.
It gets hardER, but nothing like my stock DD. Hell, I even put S10 Blazer front calipers on my S10 pickup, because they are dual piston, and have never had a problem with the swap.
The blazer pedal has more travel than my DD pedal, plus it never quite hits the super hard spot the DD has.
Also, while you are doing the pedal test, if you still have the steel top MC, then pop the top, press the brake pedal down hard, then let it snap up to see if you get a geyser from one side or the other.
There is no geyser when letting off the pedal quickly. There is only a small geyser when the pedal is pressed and only at the beginning. I tried this test with the truck ON and OFF.
Oh, and I think I saw where one can order brake fluid in a 30 gallon drum one time............
Yep, probably off to get a gallon, some hose, and some buckets. I'll gravity bleed all 4 today. Never done it but it sounds easy. Put a hose on each bleeder, down to a bucket. Crack them all. And make sure the MC doesn't run dry. Watch for air bubbles once there's enough fluid in the bucket to cover the hose.
The rear caliper bleeders are straight up, couldn't be more straight up. The D60s are in the factory up position, which are damn near straight up.