Awesome Possum
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I appreciate your words. Much of my frustration comes from the fact that I'm not working on it myself because of the bad elbow. I did email the tech manual to my mechanic and he'll go over it. I'll also print out a copy as well. Yeah, a brake system is nothing to mess with and that's the point of setting up a little consultation in advance for Sunday when he'll be there. Not a complete how-to over the phone, just maybe something not covered in the TM. I spent most of my career working with people on the phone, so I have a lot of faith in it.AP, let's take it by the numbers. If in fact your Deuce had brakes before you opened the lines, and in fact that is the only thing you did, then the problem is likely something you touched OR something not working properly as a result of what you did.
33 ounces is a lot to just disappear. Did it? Can you confirm that there is not fluid in the master? What happened when you filled it?
Proper procedure would be to fill the master completely, and then bleed it. And to refill as you went so that you do not reintroduce air. Is this what you did?
The air pack is kind of behind the master. You can lodcate the master, correct? easist way is to get under the truck and to watch what moves when you depress the brake pedal. Now, coming out of the master is a kinda short steel line that goes to another master-looking thing. When you depress the brakes, this thing will make an air sound. This is the air pack. If I am not mistaken, you want to bleed from the master to the airpack first. There is a bleeder right at the air pack.
I completely agree that you should download the TM and read it. But at the same time, this is a simple single circuit hydraulic brake system just like most others. Except it is bigger and the air pack in the line works off positive pressure as opposed to the Hydrovac-type boosters that worked off vacuum (think mid-50s GM cars and Jaguars).
So anyone who understand the concepts of a hydraulic brake system can work on this and troubleshoot it and figure it out. If you friend is uncertain, and no offense meant, then find someone else locally who can chime in. A telephone consultation might work but sometimes there is no substitute for eyes right there looking at it.
I am sure that no offense was meant by anyone on this thread. You must admit it is kind of scary to think f a 13,000 lb vehicle with faulty brakes. hence a high level of caution in general. Don't take it personally, we all had to earn our bones and now is your turn. That is meant in a good way.
Again, I know the dangers of having a bad brake system and want to get ALL the help I can get. A TM is knowledge; a man's experience is wisdom. I'd like to get both so I know the thing will stop when I ask it to. No one's life is worth it over utter faith in only one source of info. I'll not "earn my bones" at the risk of hurting someone. There's a big contradiction between being safe and learning to do it without asking for help. It is obvious, however, I'm not going to get help here. Lesson learned.