- Joined
- Nov 26, 2005
- Messages
- 6,220
In general, I bench bleed master cylinders using the plugged port method for two reasons.
1. I receive positive feedback when all of the air has been bled out of the master cylinder in the form of a hydraulically locked piston after a very short stroke. How far it will stroke will be determined by the distance from the cup seals to the transfer ports into the reservoir(s), but it's usually 1/8" +/-1/16" or so in my experience.
2. Once fully bleed, I can apply force for a period of time to verify that it doesn't sink over time, something that would indicate an internal seal bypassing fluid under pressure.
I've been using this method somewhat exclusively for ~20+ years due to a spate of bad experiences installing faulty remanufactured master cylinders onto various vehicles, my '77 EB being one of them. I remember bench bleeding one Napa master cylinder for almost an hour with the recirculation method only to find that one of the internal seals was faulty after putting it on the vehicle and then struggling to get a good pedal for the better part of another couple of hours. At that point, I decided there had to be a better way, and IMO, there is. The recirculation method moves fluid from the bore back into the reservoir, but it does so at atmospheric pressure, so any bubbles trapped in seal grooves or in tight places don't necessarily have any motivation to release from whatever surface they're clinging to and move with the fluid in my experience. FWIW, both methods are "approved" methods by most brake hydraulic manufacturers.
On a side note, I reserve reverse bleeding techniques for ABS/traction-control equipped cars where you would otherwise need a computer to overcome the hydraulic control unit...and for my brakes and dropper seat post on my mountain bike.
Tobin
1. I receive positive feedback when all of the air has been bled out of the master cylinder in the form of a hydraulically locked piston after a very short stroke. How far it will stroke will be determined by the distance from the cup seals to the transfer ports into the reservoir(s), but it's usually 1/8" +/-1/16" or so in my experience.
2. Once fully bleed, I can apply force for a period of time to verify that it doesn't sink over time, something that would indicate an internal seal bypassing fluid under pressure.
I've been using this method somewhat exclusively for ~20+ years due to a spate of bad experiences installing faulty remanufactured master cylinders onto various vehicles, my '77 EB being one of them. I remember bench bleeding one Napa master cylinder for almost an hour with the recirculation method only to find that one of the internal seals was faulty after putting it on the vehicle and then struggling to get a good pedal for the better part of another couple of hours. At that point, I decided there had to be a better way, and IMO, there is. The recirculation method moves fluid from the bore back into the reservoir, but it does so at atmospheric pressure, so any bubbles trapped in seal grooves or in tight places don't necessarily have any motivation to release from whatever surface they're clinging to and move with the fluid in my experience. FWIW, both methods are "approved" methods by most brake hydraulic manufacturers.
On a side note, I reserve reverse bleeding techniques for ABS/traction-control equipped cars where you would otherwise need a computer to overcome the hydraulic control unit...and for my brakes and dropper seat post on my mountain bike.
Tobin