lolp
Member
Hi. I've read about Guide brake bleeding problems but never experienced them until now.
To cut a long story short(ish) my lbs replaced the whole rear brake - lever caliper and hose after issues with the original one (which may not have been necessary but thats a different story). After two rides the lever was spongey and had much travel before having any effect and even then the stopping power was low. So I bled the brakes and the lever felt solid with little travel so I rode again but by the end of that ride the lever was spongey I had to pull almost to the bar to get only a fraction of the stopping power I started the ride with. I can't find a leak anywhere visible. so I bled them twice again - even taking the caliper off on one bleed so the bleed port was at the highest point. Same result - end of one ride and a mushy rear brake. I also bled the front brake (once) in the same way and all is fine there. so I did it again and replaced the pads - same again but perhaps less so (not much). And each time I bleed them there seems to be no air in the hose but I'm pulling quite a lot of air out of the caliper in particular.
2 other points -
1. On the first bleed I had the lever set to 75mm from the front of the bars not centre so it was pulled further
2. The Guide RE has the old bleed port - not the bleeding edge technology.
So has anyone got any ideas what could be wrong or tips to improve the bleeding to give me a happy new year. Thanks.
To cut a long story short(ish) my lbs replaced the whole rear brake - lever caliper and hose after issues with the original one (which may not have been necessary but thats a different story). After two rides the lever was spongey and had much travel before having any effect and even then the stopping power was low. So I bled the brakes and the lever felt solid with little travel so I rode again but by the end of that ride the lever was spongey I had to pull almost to the bar to get only a fraction of the stopping power I started the ride with. I can't find a leak anywhere visible. so I bled them twice again - even taking the caliper off on one bleed so the bleed port was at the highest point. Same result - end of one ride and a mushy rear brake. I also bled the front brake (once) in the same way and all is fine there. so I did it again and replaced the pads - same again but perhaps less so (not much). And each time I bleed them there seems to be no air in the hose but I'm pulling quite a lot of air out of the caliper in particular.
2 other points -
1. On the first bleed I had the lever set to 75mm from the front of the bars not centre so it was pulled further
2. The Guide RE has the old bleed port - not the bleeding edge technology.
So has anyone got any ideas what could be wrong or tips to improve the bleeding to give me a happy new year. Thanks.