Muddy Bean
Full Access Members
Just wanting the collective wisdom here to confirm my plan to bleed my brakes in order to merely perform a brake fluid exchange with fresh fluid:
Starting at the passenger rear and working to drivers rear, then passenger front, then drivers front. Bleeding the brakes in that order is correct right? I’ve read that some vehicles have an ABS modulator or something near the rear of the vehicle which would require me to actually reverse the bleeding wheel order...can someone confirm or deny this? I’m filing this stuff away for future maintenance but this truck is the newest vehicle I’ve ever owned so things are a bit different on it in terms of normal maintenance than my 1998 Toyota was.
[emoji1742][emoji3603]
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Starting at the passenger rear and working to drivers rear, then passenger front, then drivers front. Bleeding the brakes in that order is correct right? I’ve read that some vehicles have an ABS modulator or something near the rear of the vehicle which would require me to actually reverse the bleeding wheel order...can someone confirm or deny this? I’m filing this stuff away for future maintenance but this truck is the newest vehicle I’ve ever owned so things are a bit different on it in terms of normal maintenance than my 1998 Toyota was.
[emoji1742][emoji3603]
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro