In general, when the light is on it means you have a leak either the front or rear circuit. If you're sure you don't (including internal to the MC) and the brakes work well, all four corners heat up, etc, then there must be something wrong with the switch or combo valve. Here's a few test ideas:
-Unplug the connector on the switch to make sure it kills the light.
-Take the switch off and see if it moves freely and makes/breaks the ground connection.
-Pull the whole combo valve out of the end and stick something in there to see if you can slide the center piston around. (maybe it's stuck?). Maybe with the switch out you can also get a pick in that bore and see of the piston moves.
This all looks like a lot of brake bleeding, though. Maybe it's quicker to swap in a known good combo valve? I've also heard of people eliminating that valve by just running a tee to the front and a direct connection to the rear. I can't tell you whether this is a good idea or not.
I don't think a good combo valve would be much of a problem with your setup. It's not much different than a stock setup. I don't think the combo valve even had different variations for the different brake options. They just used different master cylinders.
-Unplug the connector on the switch to make sure it kills the light.
-Take the switch off and see if it moves freely and makes/breaks the ground connection.
-Pull the whole combo valve out of the end and stick something in there to see if you can slide the center piston around. (maybe it's stuck?). Maybe with the switch out you can also get a pick in that bore and see of the piston moves.
This all looks like a lot of brake bleeding, though. Maybe it's quicker to swap in a known good combo valve? I've also heard of people eliminating that valve by just running a tee to the front and a direct connection to the rear. I can't tell you whether this is a good idea or not.
I don't think a good combo valve would be much of a problem with your setup. It's not much different than a stock setup. I don't think the combo valve even had different variations for the different brake options. They just used different master cylinders.
