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I know these are out there for sale, however, i am a do-it-yourself kind of guy. I was at a friend of mine who has about 20-30 M/V's and his shop manager and I were discussing pressure bleeding versus vacuum bleeding. We both prefer pressure to vacuum.
I statered thinking about the comp bottles we use offshore, and I put this together. Total time invested: 30 minutes brainstorming, 30 minutes for the parts run and 5 minutes assembly time.
Total cost: $25.00
Take the master cylinder cap, remove the plug from the center (or better yet, get an extra cap you may have laying around, that way just keep the assembly together), screw the 90 degree turn on, connect the male QD and screw on to your master cylinder.
Remove the threaded cap from the end of the sprayer, screw on the connector for the hose.
Now you can fill your sprayer with brake fluid, pressure it up and bleed your brakes without a second person to press the brakes.
As your bottle continually fills your resivoir as you're bleeding the system, you don't have to keep crawing out and filling it.
Supplies:
(1) 5 gallon spray bottle
(1) 90 degree connector
(1) female quick disconnect coupler(I used air line and QD's)
(1) Male quick disconnect coupler
(1) 6' section 3/8 air hose
If you wish to have constatnt pressure, you can remove the spring valve on the bottle and replace it with a ball valve.
I statered thinking about the comp bottles we use offshore, and I put this together. Total time invested: 30 minutes brainstorming, 30 minutes for the parts run and 5 minutes assembly time.
Total cost: $25.00
Take the master cylinder cap, remove the plug from the center (or better yet, get an extra cap you may have laying around, that way just keep the assembly together), screw the 90 degree turn on, connect the male QD and screw on to your master cylinder.
Remove the threaded cap from the end of the sprayer, screw on the connector for the hose.
Now you can fill your sprayer with brake fluid, pressure it up and bleed your brakes without a second person to press the brakes.
As your bottle continually fills your resivoir as you're bleeding the system, you don't have to keep crawing out and filling it.
Supplies:
(1) 5 gallon spray bottle
(1) 90 degree connector
(1) female quick disconnect coupler(I used air line and QD's)
(1) Male quick disconnect coupler
(1) 6' section 3/8 air hose
If you wish to have constatnt pressure, you can remove the spring valve on the bottle and replace it with a ball valve.
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