Brake bleeding problems?

2003 SAAB 9-3
123,456 MILES • 1.4L • 4 CYL • TURBO • 2WD • MANUAL
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JEEP769
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I have a 2003 Saab 9-3 vector manual transmission 6-speed with turbo. Anyways my car has been at the mechanic shop for about a month now and he is having trouble bleeding the brakes. I replaced one brake line on the front, a brake hose on the front and everything all around to calipers pads and rotors. Well he started bleeding it with the old master cylinder and he finally got them all to bleed but before this I could only get the drivers front and the passenger rear to bleed and as did he until he used a vacuum and everything he could to get them all to bleed finally But the pedal goes all the way to the floor? He does not have a scan tool or whatever it takes to bleed the ABS block. And since then, he has installed the new master cylinder I gave him, and he could not get anything to bleed out of the brakes with the new master cylinder. So, he thought it was the master cylinder could be bad, so I went ahead and bought another one and I'm waiting for him to install that as I am messaging you this. Today is Friday and he said his next time to schedule it in again is Wednesday. So, I am curious to see if it's going to be the master cylinder or not. But I believe it is the ABS block not being able to get bled with a scan tool. Any info you have would be great I just don't know if it would be the ABS block causing it to go all the way to the floor or not but he said that he put the new master cylinder in and was not even getting anything to bleed out of the brakes which is crazy to me. Anyways that's where I'm at on it for this problem for now any help would be great thanks for your time.
Jul 25, 2025 at 9:54 PM
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STRAILER
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Sure, I can help, I need to ask if he bled the new brake master before installing it? Also, the brake system will need to be bleed with a scanner. Also, I would check out the caliper slides, if one or more is seized it will make the brake pedal go to the floor.

Here are two videos and one guide to help us fix the problem:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQRnKyVyMuQ

and

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDxvEQrMkBg

And the guide for caliper slides:

https://www.2carpros.com/articles/discover-why-automotive-brake-pads-wear-unevenly

Please upload pictures or videos in your response of any problems.
Jul 27, 2025 at 11:08 AM
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JEEP769
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Well he did bench bleed the master cylinder. And all of the calipers are brand new so the side pins and stuff should not be a problem at all. Everything on it is brand new, the only thing that isn't is the ABS block and a couple of brake lines and brake hoses. But if he got them to bleed before the new master cylinder was put in it could not be the brake lines being collapsed or anything because he got food to come out of all four developers with the old master cylinder so on and then when he changed to put the new one on he had nothing.
Jul 27, 2025 at 11:51 AM
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Was the ABS valves held open with a scanner while bleeding? It could be the master is defective or there is so much air in the system the only way to fix it is to use a scanner.
Jul 27, 2025 at 12:20 PM
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JEEP769
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The mechanic said he doesn't have a scan tool with Saab to or be able to bleed the abs. And i bought and gave him a new master. This is the second new one i've bought because he thought the bypass valve inside the master was stuck possibly? Idk i do know he is scheduled to put on the new master and try bleeding it again on wedensday... I am pry just going to pay him for his work he has done if it doesn't work and take my car to someone that has a scantool to bleed abs... I would think a fancy Snap-On scantool would do that.. it almost looks like a tablet. Just wanted to check and see if you thought it was the ABS block not being able to get blood so I could tell him that I can get the car out of there and get it to someone who has a scam tool to do it because I have another vehicle right now and that's running on its last leg. And I can't afford it anymore I need my car back that gets good gas mileage, LOL.
Jul 27, 2025 at 11:18 PM
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Yep, I understand. for sure the ABS system must be opened to bleed the brakes. Just make sure the shop you take it to can do the job before you have the car towed.
Jul 28, 2025 at 12:26 PM
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JEEP769
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Alrite thanks. The mechanic thinks that you should still have brakes with no abs... I mean they were working before all of this. And it was all just going to be a simple change the pads job lol.. idk if the abs was even working when i was driving it . 8m actually almost 95% it wasnt because the abs light was on all the time and the speed sensors are cut...
Jul 29, 2025 at 12:26 AM
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Yep, even if the ABS does not work the valves must be opened to get the air out. Other than that caliper slides or recheck the brake pad installation, you might have a retainer clip on wrong which pulls the pads from the brake rotor.
Jul 29, 2025 at 10:39 AM
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JEEP769
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Okay and if I had the retainer clips wrong would it make the whole caliper loose on the rotor also not having no pressure at all on the pads? I will definitely let you know what's going on with it tomorrow because it's scheduled tomorrow to have the new master cylinder that I bought again put on and he's going to try bleeding them again. He thinks it's bypass valve in the master cylinder I guess is what he told me so it could be that Navy but time will tell I guess I will find out tomorrow and I can let you know more tomorrow what's up with it. If that isn't the problem I am definitely taking it to another shop. I had a buddy refer me to where his parents take all of their saabs to. Of course he did not tell me that until after I already went to this other shop and had my car there already LOL but I guess you got to learn sometime
Jul 29, 2025 at 11:05 AM
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LOL yep, that is the way it goes, timing, not our strong suite :/ let me know I am interested to se what is found.
Jul 29, 2025 at 12:23 PM
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JEEP769
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Ok ill definatly let you know and thanks for all the help so far
Jul 29, 2025 at 4:33 PM
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CARADIODOC
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Hi guys. I have a couple of comments that will help. First, as Ken has been mentioning, you need a scanner to command the computer to open two valves so trapped pooled air can be expelled from two chambers, then be pushed out to the wheels. Going to a mechanic without that scanner is like going to a surgeon who doesn't have a scalpel.

Next, the glaring comment was when you said it only bleeds from one front brake and the opposite rear one. You can put as many new master cylinders on as you want to, but you'll keep having the same problem. This sounds like a version of GM's master cylinders. Think of a teeter totter inside and on each end is a valve that blocks one of the lines leaving that master cylinder. That teeter totter stays balanced, or neutral, with no ports blocked, as long as equal pressure is built up in both halves of the hydraulic system. When one side builds more pressure, such as when a leak develops, or you try to bleed manually with the pedal and a helper, or when you just pump the brake pedal to run the pistons back out of the calipers to adjust them, one side always builds pressure first, then that teeter totter trips to block the port with lower pressure. In that way you don't lose brake fluid to a leak.

Normally, having just one front brake will tear the steering wheel out of your hands hard enough to break wrists, but when this split-diagonal system is used, the steering and suspension geometry is modified to overcome that. Chrysler had that so well perfected that the only way to know there was a problem was through the red "Brake" warning light. On most other brands, the most you might see is a tiny wiggle in the steering wheel when the brakes are applied, but you have to look for it.

To add to this misery, almost all service manuals say to push the brake pedal all the way to the floor when pedal-bleeding. Those instructions don't take into account what happens after the vehicle is more than about a year old. Crud and corrosion build up in the lower halves of the bores in the master cylinder where the pistons don't normally travel. By running the pedal all the way down, the rubber lip seals run over that crud and can be ripped. That commonly results in a slowly sinking brake pedal, and that often takes two or three days to show up. You don't have to worry about that yet with your new master cylinders, but pushing all the way while bench-bleeding may also trip that internal valve. I've had good luck by never pushing the brake pedal more than halfway to the floor, and I don't get too involved with bench-bleeding either. Forget about the last few remaining air bubbles. Once the unit is installed, those bubbles aren't going to go down to the wheels. If you push the brake pedal slowly, the bubbles will float back up, then get washed into the reservoir with the returning fluid when the pedal is released. Within a few normal stops, all the air will have been expelled into the reservoir.

The same thing works when replacing the master cylinder. There's no need to bleed at the wheels. The air is up on top. Why push it all the way down to the wheels, especially when much of it is going to get trapped in the ABS hydraulic unit.

As for that valve that's tripped in the new master cylinders, the only way I've ever found to solve that is to open either one of the bleeder screws that won't flow any fluid, then give that one a very short blast of compressed air with a rubber-tipped nozzle. It takes just a tiny puff of air to unseat the valve in the master cylinder. You don't want to inject so much air that it takes forever to bleed it back out. I like to give the nozzle a quick karate chop with my hand. Shortly after that, fluid will start flowing from gravity. Leave the cap loose on the reservoir when doing this.

Some service manuals from GM say to bleed by starting at a certain wheel, but that doesn't make sense. If that valve won't trip if you start bleeding at the right rear, for example, it isn't going to trip when that circuit develops a leak either. That makes the whole point of that valve useless. I always start with the wheel I'm standing closest to. Gravity-bleeding is usually the only method I use, but once in a while it's necessary to "irritate" the brake pedal a little, by hand, to get the flow started. Again, leave the reservoir cap loose so no vacuum builds up that would impede that flow.

Hope that helps to reduce the frustration.
Jul 29, 2025 at 11:29 PM
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JEEP769
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Hello and Thanks again to you both. Well as I said my car was supposed to go in on Wednesday last week well. I don't know if it did or not but I called the mechanic on Wednesday afternoon and Friday before he closes around 4:00 p.m. and still have not heard nothing back from him didn't hear from him all day today either I drove past over the weekend and my car is inside the shop anyways but why wouldn't he at least let me know what's going on or if he can't do it like why wouldn't he call me to let me know what's up I guess. He is a pretty well-known mechanic around the area and does pretty good work from what everybody I've asked that knows of him. And our old mechanic for our business trucks was the one that recommended him to me. So I figured he would be all right. Knowing that he has never worked on foreign cars or at least any Saabs, I figured I would let him take a stab at it if he was willing to take it on and do the job for me.. but it is scaring me that he's not even returning my calls now I have to pretty much go out there to the shop myself which is tough with the hours that I work because I am working in the same hours he does. But I should not have to drive all the way out there to see what's going on with my car. I mean if he cannot get it. Tell me and I want to take my car somewhere else I will pay him for what I owe so far for putting all the brake parts on my car and trying to bleed it maybe once but I better not have to pay for all this shop time that it's been sitting in there and him trying to figure it out. Not really sure what to do anymore with it whether I just wait for him to call me finally or do I need to go in and talk to him again as I have three or four other times just showed up there and asked how things were going. I don't want to make you mad because then my bill will probably go up and I probably won't even be able to get my car out of there so he will end up keeping it for payment because I can't pay for it and I will be stuck with nothing
Aug 4, 2025 at 9:27 PM
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JEEP769
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Here is a couple of photos and a video of my car while I'm waiting for the mechanic to reply LOL
Aug 4, 2025 at 9:30 PM
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STRAILER
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Yep, you should be able to get the brakes working, the ABS system needs to be open, or I would use vise grips and gently close off each wheels brake flex hose to see if it makes a difference.
Aug 5, 2025 at 8:47 AM
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JEEP769
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Here is the shop that Ive taken it to so he is legit. I just cant wrap my head around why i havent heard from him is beyond me
Aug 6, 2025 at 10:07 PM
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Yep, he looks legit, you need to talk to him or take it somewhere else. Thanks for the video and images btw. Let me know what happens.
Aug 7, 2025 at 6:41 PM
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JEEP769
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Okay will do still have not heard word back from him at all I will try him again today I called him Monday and yesterday which would be Thursday and I'm going to try calling him again today to see if I get somebody to answer I have to work pretty much the same hours his shops open so it's hard for me to get out there and just stop in there but today at work we are working close by there so I might be able to pop in there with the work truck and see what's up with it I will keep you posted and let you know what happens with it though
Aug 8, 2025 at 5:06 AM
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Sounds good, have a nice weekend :)
Aug 8, 2025 at 11:11 AM
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JEEP769
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Well a new update on the car it is still not done they actually had to replace one of the brand new calipers that were on it because the threads broke on a line somewhere I'm not sure where you didn't specify but he had to order a new one and I'm hoping I don't have to pay for that because I've already paid for all four new calipers on it. But now when they went to bleed it after they put the new caliper on after they had all the brakes working and getting fluid out of them and they had brakes they put the new caliper on and now they only have two brakes working again as it was when I first brought it into the shop and he swears it is the master cylinder still again being bad. I mentioned about the ABS bleed and he said that the master cylinder doesn't even bleed and that's what goes into the ABS or something is what he said so he said it's not even getting to the ABS for it to be the ABS. If that makes sense? I don't know I'm pretty upset about the whole thing. And my truck is falling apart I had to put a bad spare tire on last night that I had to plug it for it even to hold air. And the threads are almost ready to start showing on the inside and the outside of that tire and three other tires on my truck so I am really needing my car back and working. It really upsets me I almost want to just tell him to throw in the towel and I'll take it to another shop and I'll pay them for whatever they've done to it so far. But I am afraid to see the bill if I do do that. It's almost like saying I don't want to play on your team I want to play on this other team. So I don't know what to do really they have my car and I want it working and back. He did say that I could go out there tomorrow if I can get off at a time to do that as their shop is open and he said he would show me exactly what it is doing. So I am kind of at a loss right now I'm upset irritated and just want my Saab back so I can drive it. And save money on gas and other things as well as I'm going to have to spend on this Dodge ram that I own that is a piece of crap LOL anyways I guess not a very good update but it's an update. Figured I would feel you in or you guys if anyone else is reading this. Hope you all had a good week so far mine has gone great except for today. Hearing that news after I got off a hard days of labor at work really got me knocked down
Aug 14, 2025 at 3:28 PM
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Yep, car repairs are never fun. I don't like to say but it seems like this guy does not know what he is doing, I don't think you have three defective master cylinders. I know he says he is bleeding the masters off of the car, but if they dont work you would not be able to do this. Please go over this video to see what I am talking about.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDxvEQrMkBg

You can see the fluid moving inside the master.
Aug 15, 2025 at 11:43 AM
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JEEP769
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Yeah I don't know if you bench blood it or not or just put it on and then tried to bleed the brakes. But he said they had it bleeding with the other one on and they had to replace a brake caliper that the threads were leaking somewhere. You didn't specify what hose or where it was leaking but he said the threads were bad on one of the brand new calipers. And then when they put the new caliper on it started bleeding as it did before with the left front and the right rear and not the right front driver's rear wasn't bleeding. I don't know how that is possible I guess if it was bleeding before they put the new caliper on so after that they had me order the new master cylinder again so this is the second master cylinder that I bought and they installed and now they said it's the same thing that they are only getting it to come out of the two wheels. I am going to probably have to buy another master cylinder cuz I really don't have the time with my schedule at work to go haul the car myself with our truck and trailer from our shop during the week because I can't get the time off to do it myself but I would like to just pay them and then get the car to someone else that knows what they're doing and I'd like to let them know that before I get my bill because I have a feeling they will skyrocket my bill up if I take it somewhere else. But I really don't want to pay the labor for them to install another master cylinder just for that not to work again. Or I should tell them if I do buy a new master cylinder and if it does not work I am not going to pay for the labor for them putting that one on again
Aug 16, 2025 at 9:05 AM
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JEEP769
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I just wish this mechanic, if he cannot figure it out just tell me he does not know what it is and quit trying to guess what it is because I live on a paycheck to paycheck type of wage and I can't afford trial and error on this car and I need this car for the gas mileage because I cannot afford driving what I'm driving right now at all, as we have reduced our hours because of the heat during the week for work
Aug 16, 2025 at 9:07 AM
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STRAILER
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I would just get it out of there and tell the story to another shop, obviously the current machinic cannot do the job. Sorry.
Aug 16, 2025 at 7:23 PM
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JEEP769
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Ok thats the plan anyways. Thanks for all of your time and help. It is much appreciated! Hope you had a good weekend
Aug 16, 2025 at 11:40 PM
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You are welcome, please let me know what happens to the car once repaired :)
Aug 17, 2025 at 12:01 PM
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JEEP769
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I will definitely let you know. Right now I'm waiting for the bill to see what the damage is going to be for what they didn't fix LOL. But I should be able to get it out hopefully this Friday if it is not too much. We have been cut hours because of the heat for work so I'm hoping my paycheck will be big enough to get it out of the shop. I'm almost scared that I'm not going to be making enough hours to be able to pay for it to get it out of there for the next couple weeks and hopefully he does not tow it or something or sell it or whatever they do if the car sits too long. But I had another question I just remembered one of the break lines coming off of the ABS block. I had to replace and it's not the same size it's a standard but we took the nut off of the old one and reflared the new line to make it fit on with that nut. Would that have anything to do with the pressure of the Pistons inside it making them stick and not bleeding? Even if my abs wasn't working? Just curious that was something I totally forgot that happened and that I did also I did measure the metric and standard to see what standard converts over to metric and I got it as close as I could I cannot remember for sure the size right now right off hand it's been so long ago when I did that. But I didn't know if the pressure in the lines would have something to do with them not bleeding properly as well.? Again thanks for all of your time in reading all these I know you're probably pretty busy with a bunch of other people on forums as well. I have a buddy that does customer support tech for factory machinery and stuff like where they process hogs and such. So I know kind of what you do for work. And that's pretty cool hopefully you get to stay at home and work from home as well as my buddy does but he does have to go out and fix some stuff if they cannot figure it out sometimes LOL
Aug 19, 2025 at 9:35 PM
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No worries, I am glad to help, as long as the brake line is not leaking you should be okay. Also, you can use vise grips to gently close off the brake flex hoses to help see if the problem is in the master or wheels, please go over this guide again.

https://www.2carpros.com/articles/brake-pedal-goes-to-the-floor

Please go over this guide and get back to us.
Aug 20, 2025 at 9:55 AM
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JEEP769
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Okay so an update on my car I get it out of the shop $60 later. Nothing is fixed on it except for pretty much the brake hose that I wore a hole through and it was leaking so now it holds pressure into brakes again the same as when I was driving it before I took it to the shop. They did not repair the rear brake caliper and install my new rotor and pads that I had for them to install instead they changed the two front rotors which have already had brand new ones on it and the one was never blood or working so it has never been used I don't know why they would replace it and then they return them for a core charge as well and didn't even give me the brakes back that I paid for and that were brand new on the vehicle another thing they were supposed to change the pads in the rotor on the driver's front which they did not do because the parts are still sitting in my backseat all the parts I gave them are still in my car that I wanted them to replace and then they had me by two Master cylinders and wanted me to buy a third while I got one master cylinder back that I bought and I want the original one and they don't think they have that either.

That really screwed me over and didn't even fix my car and now the alternator just went out of it when I got it back the same day. So I don't know if they had something to do with that as well but I would not recommend Benton Auto in fort Dodge Iowa to anyone because the guy is a freaking idiot. I would call to try to get updates and stuff during the week and never got any call backs I would either have to stop at the shop or just keep calling until I finally got him off guard I think. I don't know if there's anything I can do or anyone I can go to to deal with this I could take him to court but it probably wouldn't even be worth it because there is no estimate saying what you was supposed to do with the car at first when I dropped it off.

But I do have the receipts for all the new parts that he was supposed to install I never did and I still have the parts in my backseat. He had my car for two and a half months to install some brake parts and bleed the brakes. I am really not happy about the whole deal I would like to punch the guy right in the face LOL but then I will go to jail I I'm too good of person to do something like that.

But I just want him to know that he's not going to get over on me and rip me off that money because that was my whole paycheck and now I am broke I live paycheck to paycheck and I was getting ahead when I was driving that car because of gas mileage and he really screwed my whole summer and my whole life this summer up he doesn't even know.

Yes I am very upset I will send pictures of the receipt and the parts that are in the back of my car and the parts that he supposedly installed when I get a chance but that's the outcome of that whole thing.

Hope you are having a great weekend! I am definitely going to try to enjoy mine. I just charged up the battery on my car and going to try to drive it to my house which is about 20 minutes away but I don't know if it will do that or not it's got a brand new battery so I'm thinking it should be enough to get me home at least so I can take the alternator out here and get a new one
Sep 6, 2025 at 12:37 PM
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Wow, I am really bummed out this garage did this to you but it happens. Like they say back to the drawing board. At least you have s good handle on what is wrong and what to look for in a good garage. Sorry again for you experience in car repair garages, dot go back and don't recommend anyone go there.
Sep 6, 2025 at 4:20 PM
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JEEP769
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Nope everyone i know is pretty furious about it as well. Yeh all i van do is spread the word snd word gets around in these smaller midwest towns fast. Thanks for everything again. And as for the brake bleed. I am just going to put a couple of t's in and bypass the whole ABS block. So it will be just like old cars with their brakes with no ABS which I don't mind anyway or do you think that would work or not
Sep 7, 2025 at 10:00 AM
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CARADIODOC
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I've been following the "progress", but I still am waiting to see that someone gave a shot of compressed air into a non-flowing bleeder screw to reset the master cylinder. This is a five-second procedure that has bailed me out of dozens of vehicles that won't bleed out of two opposite wheels, one front and the opposite rear.
Sep 7, 2025 at 4:37 PM
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JEEP769
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No I have not tried that yet with the air at all I guess I'm not really sure what you're talking about or where you're shooting the air into I don't want to mess anything else up because it seems like everything I read and see on the internet I try to do it and ended up breaking more stuff because I don't know the correct way of doing it and they make it look easy on videos
Sep 7, 2025 at 7:20 PM
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JEEP769
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Here's a picture of all the month new parts that the mechanic was supposed to install and never did
Sep 7, 2025 at 7:20 PM
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Yep, those look like good parts, did you want to try installing them yourself? We can help walk you thought it, CARADIODOC and myself ;)
Sep 8, 2025 at 11:02 AM
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JEEP769
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Cardio are you talking about shooting fresh air through the non bleeding screw in the caliper or what or through the master cylinder somehow I don't understand and could I just bypass the ABS block I did ask it question but no answer didn't know if anyone really knew or not
Sep 8, 2025 at 5:27 PM
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CARADIODOC
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Absolutely. Way back, I mentioned this but probably didn't go into enough detail. Everything discussed so far suggests the master cylinder is a common design from GM. Imagine a teeter totter inside that stays balanced, or "neutral". Brake fluid is free to flow out of both ports when the pedal is pressed. One port feeds fluid to the left front and right rear brakes. The other port feeds fluid to the other two wheels.

As long as the same brake fluid pressure builds up in each half of the system, that teeter totter stays balanced. It's when they develop different pressures, or more accurately, different flow volumes, that the teeter totter is pulled off-center, then a valve tip blocks that port. The purpose of this is when you spring a leak, such as from a ruptured rubber flex hose or a rusted metal line, fluid flow to the leak is blocked so you don't pump all the brake fluid out onto the ground. I described previously how the steering and suspension geometry was redesigned to counteract a very hard steering wheel pull when this occurs, so the only clue you have is the red "Brake" warning light. Very often people don't even know they're driving on half their brakes, and they get confused when the pads wear out quickly on one front brake repeatedly, while those on the other side look like new.

I don't know if you can trip this valve by bench-bleeding the new master cylinder. You aren't building any pressure, and both sides flow the same volume. Besides a customer coming in with a leak, this valve commonly trips during pedal-bleeding with a helper. Standard practice is to open just one bleeder screw at a time. That's the same as having a leak. No pressure can build up when the bleeder screw is open. In the other half of the system, pressure does build when the pedal is pressed. THAT is what trips the valve. Too often that tripped valve is misinterpreted as a defective master cylinder, when in fact, it did exactly what it was designed to do. Replacing the master cylinder over and over isn't going to help until you let one of them gravity-bleed without pressing the brake pedal. I think you can get away with pushing the pedal less than halfway to the floor, but we tend to push it too far.

As long as brake fluid flows from two wheels, you might as well finish those up and get the air out, then, the only way I have found to unseat that valve is to give that short, quick shot of compressed air into the open bleeder screw of one of the brakes that is not flowing any fluid. You don't need to force that air all the way up to the master cylinder. That just makes it that much harder to bleed it back out. You also want to avoid pushing air into the anti-lock brake hydraulic controller. Many of them require a scanner to bleed the air out of them. Rather, I use a rubber-tipped air nozzle, and I give it a quick karate chop to the handle. I suspect the air goes in less than a foot up the line because it's all bled out again very quickly. The cap on the brake fluid reservoir should be loose so no pressure builds up there that would fight what you're trying to do.

A lot of experienced professionals will tell you this valve won't trip if you bleed the four brakes in a specific order, usually starting with the right rear, but logic dictates that is not true. Even some service manuals say the same thing, but if you think about it, if that valve doesn't trip when you bleed the right rear first, it won't trip if you develop a leak in that circuit either, so there's no point in having that feature. I always start bleeding with the wheel I'm standing closest to.

Another trick when you do have to replace the master cylinder, is to loosen the two soft metal line nuts a little, then unbolt the master cylinder from the power booster, pull it forward off the mounting studs, use it as a handle to bend the steel lines up a little, then finish unbolting the lines. Bending the lines prevents a little brake fluid from running out. Bench-bleed the new master cylinder, connect it to the lines, bend the lines back down, and bolt the unit in place. You'll need a helper for this next step. Snug one line nut. Leave the other one a little loose. Have your helper push the brake pedal very slowly so it takes roughly 15 seconds to go halfway to the floor. You'll see air bubbles coming out at the loose nut. Be sure to snug that nut first, THEN holler to the helper to release the pedal quickly. Open that nut and do the same thing, and maybe once more, until no air bubbles come out. Next, do the same thing with the other line.

By pushing slowly on the pedal, what little air might be in the line floats back up as brake fluid goes down. By releasing the pedal quickly, the brake fluid rushing back up into the reservoir washes any air bubbles back up with it. In this way, you don't have to bleed at the wheels and there's no chance of getting air trapped in the ABS hydraulic controller. Even if a few tiny air bubbles are still trapped, you'll never know it, and they will eventually flow into the reservoir. Air doesn't float down.

Please come back and tell us this worked.
Sep 8, 2025 at 5:57 PM
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JEEP769
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Hey sorry guys for not responding for a while. But I did eventually get my brakes fixed through another mechanic and he used the scan tool to bleed them. Had a couple issues after I got it back but they repaired it for free as there was a leak on one of the calipers. And I also had them installed the alternator because my battery is not charging and as of recent I have more problems with it but I am working on getting those fixed as well I may have to send your question in on this website to get some help again on a few things. But all in all the car is running great just had a little coolant leak but I fix that and the alternator went out again so that should be under warranty and be getting fixed for free. All I have to do is find a way to get it to the shop LOL which shouldn't be too hard but I just got to set up a time and get it done with the weather being so nice right now before it turns to Sub-Zero again hope you all had a Merry Christmas! And I do appreciate all the help that you've helped me with throughout my journey of being a new Saab owner.
Dec 26, 2025 at 9:22 AM
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CARADIODOC
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Happy to hear you're making progress. Getting the car back to the shop should be easy. Set it on autopilot. It likely knows the way back there by now!
Dec 26, 2025 at 3:50 PM