I own every “pro level” bleed kit out there, and decided to pick up the Park Tool kit for the collection. I just bled a set of Guide RS’s on a buddies bike that felt like poop despite numerous attempts to fix them. Pulled a good vacuum with the Park kit and I got MUCH more air out than I was able to with my other kits. Now they feel perfect. Now all I need is the Mineral Fluid kit for my wife’s bikes. (She’s an XT/XTR type of gal)
I prefer the Jagwire Elite bleeding kit to anything else in the market. www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07YYN9BSZ?pf_rd_r=ABT01C35MQ4KKJBM01TB&pf_rd_p=6fc81c8c-2a38-41c6-a68a-f78c79e7253f For Sram brakes My second choice would be Sram's own Professional bleeding kit that comes with 4 additional insert-olive combinations. Would be a tie with the Park Tool kit, if not for the latter's excessive cost.
I've just tried this and I'm having an issue removing air from the Rear Brake (It worked great on the front!). No more bubbles were being drawn up after lever squeeze/creating a vaccum repeat process. However after finishing the brake is still soft aka air in the system, any tips?
Why not bleed from calipers to levers. Wouldn't most air be at the top of the system already. Isn't that how the previous bleed worked? Would there be issue continuing to bleed from calipers?
Two reasons. 1. It's how SRAM say you should bleed them, their industrial design team and engineers know how to get the best result. 2. As the initial stage is to flush the old fluid from the system and most of the heat and contamination is concentrated at the calliper, it is important to remove as much of this old fluid as possible. As the bleeding edge tools acts as a tap it facilitates this part of the bleed.
Thank you very much Truman, thank you very much Park Tool! Very well done. Personally to me this is the best video by far regarding this topic. It works! (And I sure want to purchase your new THH-1 and THT-1 as well ;-)
Very good video, but you should speak about the stupid sticky sram pistons and how to deal with them so others don't have to bleed each break three times before understanding what is going on.
When I remove the lever syringe there is always a river of brake fluid that comes out of the lever bleed port. After that when I re-install the pads, wheel, and pull on the lever, the pads never engage. What am I doing wrong?
Why do you start with the contact adjust fully counter clockwise, doesn't this make it so you can only adjust the lever pull to contact the brakes later in the pull? If we would like to adjust it so the lever engages the brakes right away, wouldn't we have to rotate the contact adjust counter clockwise (of which we cant since it's already to it's max)? Thank you!
You want to bleed it in its most open position. With the most fluid allowed in the system. Then people can adjust the pad contact in to their preference from there.
This video shows clean fluid going in at the lever at the start. Then (it seems) you’re drawing the old dirty fluid back in and ejecting the fresh fluid back into the lever syringe. What am I missing?
I think, that small clip was there just to show what to expect if fluid was actually dirty. It was probably filmed not even attached to the bike. If fluid comes out dirty, you discard it and continue with fresh one. If bled frequently enough, fluid comes out clean every time.
I've watched every single video on the S-Tec site and SRAM site about bleeding. Your bleed videos are top tier.
I own every “pro level” bleed kit out there, and decided to pick up the Park Tool kit for the collection. I just bled a set of Guide RS’s on a buddies bike that felt like poop despite numerous attempts to fix them. Pulled a good vacuum with the Park kit and I got MUCH more air out than I was able to with my other kits. Now they feel perfect. Now all I need is the Mineral Fluid kit for my wife’s bikes. (She’s an XT/XTR type of gal)
I prefer the Jagwire Elite bleeding kit to anything else in the market. www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07YYN9BSZ?pf_rd_r=ABT01C35MQ4KKJBM01TB&pf_rd_p=6fc81c8c-2a38-41c6-a68a-f78c79e7253f For Sram brakes My second choice would be Sram's own Professional bleeding kit that comes with 4 additional insert-olive combinations. Would be a tie with the Park Tool kit, if not for the latter's excessive cost.
Your wife sounds hot. Does she have a boyfriend?
Today I bought your kit, review your video several times and ,.... I completed my FIRST bleeding with success. I feel great now. Thank you!!!!!
BEST TOOLS! BEST VIDEOS! Thank You
I've just tried this and I'm having an issue removing air from the Rear Brake (It worked great on the front!). No more bubbles were being drawn up after lever squeeze/creating a vaccum repeat process. However after finishing the brake is still soft aka air in the system, any tips?
You guys are the M.A.S.H. troopers of the mountain bike world. What next? A Reverb bleed kit?
Thank you so much park tool waited so long for the video!
Why not bleed from calipers to levers. Wouldn't most air be at the top of the system already. Isn't that how the previous bleed worked? Would there be issue continuing to bleed from calipers?
Two reasons.
1. It's how SRAM say you should bleed them, their industrial design team and engineers know how to get the best result.
2. As the initial stage is to flush the old fluid from the system and most of the heat and contamination is concentrated at the calliper, it is important to remove as much of this old fluid as possible. As the bleeding edge tools acts as a tap it facilitates this part of the bleed.
Sorry, I could have made this a bit clearer but I hope it makes sense!
Thank you very much Truman, thank you very much Park Tool! Very well done. Personally to me this is the best video by far regarding this topic. It works! (And I sure want to purchase your new THH-1 and THT-1 as well ;-)
Thanks. Very well made video.
Very good video, but you should speak about the stupid sticky sram pistons and how to deal with them so others don't have to bleed each break three times before understanding what is going on.
Also, shouldn't the DoT fluid be flushed annually? [Since it's hydrophilic?]
For shop use, we don't clean the syringe enough. It might get used a few times each day at each bench. I'll need to do that more often.
When I remove the lever syringe there is always a river of brake fluid that comes out of the lever bleed port. After that when I re-install the pads, wheel, and pull on the lever, the pads never engage. What am I doing wrong?
Close the bleed port, then gently pull on the syringe plunger to take the pressure out. , then remove the syringe.
Why do you start with the contact adjust fully counter clockwise, doesn't this make it so you can only adjust the lever pull to contact the brakes later in the pull? If we would like to adjust it so the lever engages the brakes right away, wouldn't we have to rotate the contact adjust counter clockwise (of which we cant since it's already to it's max)? Thank you!
You want to bleed it in its most open position. With the most fluid allowed in the system. Then people can adjust the pad contact in to their preference from there.
why does the lever need to be 75-80mm from the bar when bleeding? i've never understood why this is a relevant step in the process!
It is to position the master cylinder piston over the two ports correctly. Seems weird but is a relevent step.
Nice word sir my cycle break oil leak how to soul prablam
Please make a Campagnolo bleed video.
This video shows clean fluid going in at the lever at the start. Then (it seems) you’re drawing the old dirty fluid back in and ejecting the fresh fluid back into the lever syringe. What am I missing?
I think, that small clip was there just to show what to expect if fluid was actually dirty. It was probably filmed not even attached to the bike. If fluid comes out dirty, you discard it and continue with fresh one.
If bled frequently enough, fluid comes out clean every time.
Why don’t they use bleeding edge at the lever too?
Yea....why not? It is a cool concept.
I think you forgot to clean the pistons before retracting them at the beginning.
Its never that easy..visual trickery.