MadCityRich
02-03-2008, 09:58 AM
Hi,
I was following the brake bleeding thread from a while back and wanted to follow up on a specific technical question. Here's the key paragraph dealing with bleeding brakes on an '01 or '02 4Runner:
You can bleed the accumulator yourself at home. Have the ignition in the "OFF" position, and repeatedly press and release the brake pedal until you get a firm pedal (if it's air in the accumulator, you should eventually get a firm pedal, if you don't, it's air elsewhere). Once you get the firm pedal, take your foot off the brakes, and turn the ignition to "ON". You'll hear the brake booster pump start. It should shut off after approx 30 or 40 seconds max. If it doesn't, turn the ignition to "OFF" again, and repeat the above procedure until it does.
After that, you bleed your brakes the same as on any other vehicle with the pump/hold method except that you do it with the ignition switch in the "ON" position. That allows pressure to your rear brakes on this type of system. Otherwise, you'll have 0 psi at the rear brakes (which you probably already know.)
As an alternative, you can build a cheap power bleeder like I did here and give that a shot. Using this method, you don't need the ignition in the "ON" position. You simply pressurize the reservoir, then crack open the bleeders one at a time.
I have the Motive power bleeder and built the adapter plate that allows for securing the cap to the top of the reservoir. Last summer I did the Tundra brake upgrade and could not get the brakes bled properly. I took it to the dealer to get it finished. Tons of air in the line. I did the whole ignition on/off thing which helped, but didn't get it all done.
What I'm wondering is if, when using the Motive pressure bleeder, the ignition needs to be "on" in order to keep things properly pressurized. When I did it with the bleeder, I started the cycle with pumping the brakes and turning the ignition on, letting the accumulator pump run, then turning the ignition off. I then proceeded to use the pressure bleeder. Should the ignition be on when using the power bleeder?
Thanks for any insight,
MadCityRich
I was following the brake bleeding thread from a while back and wanted to follow up on a specific technical question. Here's the key paragraph dealing with bleeding brakes on an '01 or '02 4Runner:
You can bleed the accumulator yourself at home. Have the ignition in the "OFF" position, and repeatedly press and release the brake pedal until you get a firm pedal (if it's air in the accumulator, you should eventually get a firm pedal, if you don't, it's air elsewhere). Once you get the firm pedal, take your foot off the brakes, and turn the ignition to "ON". You'll hear the brake booster pump start. It should shut off after approx 30 or 40 seconds max. If it doesn't, turn the ignition to "OFF" again, and repeat the above procedure until it does.
After that, you bleed your brakes the same as on any other vehicle with the pump/hold method except that you do it with the ignition switch in the "ON" position. That allows pressure to your rear brakes on this type of system. Otherwise, you'll have 0 psi at the rear brakes (which you probably already know.)
As an alternative, you can build a cheap power bleeder like I did here and give that a shot. Using this method, you don't need the ignition in the "ON" position. You simply pressurize the reservoir, then crack open the bleeders one at a time.
I have the Motive power bleeder and built the adapter plate that allows for securing the cap to the top of the reservoir. Last summer I did the Tundra brake upgrade and could not get the brakes bled properly. I took it to the dealer to get it finished. Tons of air in the line. I did the whole ignition on/off thing which helped, but didn't get it all done.
What I'm wondering is if, when using the Motive pressure bleeder, the ignition needs to be "on" in order to keep things properly pressurized. When I did it with the bleeder, I started the cycle with pumping the brakes and turning the ignition on, letting the accumulator pump run, then turning the ignition off. I then proceeded to use the pressure bleeder. Should the ignition be on when using the power bleeder?
Thanks for any insight,
MadCityRich