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-   -   Bleeding brakes... on ABS 96 Accord EX Coupe or in general (https://honda-tech.com/forums/honda-accord-1990-2002-2/bleeding-brakes-abs-96-accord-ex-coupe-general-1729184/)

The-Kid 08-21-2006 09:28 PM

Bleeding brakes... on ABS 96 Accord EX Coupe or in general
 
Sup guys. I notice my brakes pedals were going to the floor and not felt as new anymore. I haven't bleed the brakes in the lifetime of the car.

So I looked into the engine bay, found the resevoir, and there were 2. One was for the ABS, and 1 was the regular brakes I guess. So how do I bleed my brake with an ABS system?

hondadude 08-22-2006 05:44 PM

Re: Bleeding brakes... on ABS 96 Accord EX Coupe or in general (The-Kid)
 
Bleed the brakes as normal, the ABS only comes into play during a wheel lock up situation.
You say the pedal is sinking to the floor, it could be the master cylinder is bypassing. Look under the master on the booster for seepage.


Modified by hondadude at 6:17 PM 8/23/2006

iam7head 08-22-2006 08:57 PM

Re: Bleeding brakes... on ABS 96 Accord EX Coupe or in general (hondadude)
 
is the abs on 96 sporting two reservoirs?

i know the older abs honda brakes need a tool to bleed, in that case, don't mess with it

JimBlake 08-23-2006 06:23 AM

Re: Bleeding brakes... on ABS 96 Accord EX Coupe or in general (iam7head)
 
If the ABS needs bleeding, that doesn't really cause the pedal to go soft. It would cause the ABS pump to run excessively & throw an ABS warning lamp.

Bleed the main brakes first, but I'd still bleed the ABS just because the fluid is so old. Search around, I'm pretty sure there's a procedure here somewhere.

The-Kid 08-23-2006 11:37 AM

Yea. there is one over the master cylinder, and one near the ABS. I've check on my bros RSX, and nothing like that. All righty then. Thanks guys!

BTW hondadude, your link is suspended.

JimBlake 08-23-2006 12:25 PM

Re: (The-Kid)
 
On the older ones like yours, you find a bleed screw near the ABS. Get a hose that fits good, & don't lose control of it. There's enough pressure to cut thru your skin if you open the bleeder too far.

Open the bleeder, close it.
Run the engine to pump up the ABS.
Open the bleeder, close it. Repeat until the reservoir is empty.
Fill the reservoir.
Repeat the run/bleed/fill sequence until fresh fluid comes out with no bubbles.

The newer ABS system (starting about '98) bleeds itself as you bleed the main brakes.

hondadude 08-23-2006 03:24 PM

Re: (The-Kid)
 

<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote, originally posted by The-Kid &raquo;</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">
BTW hondadude, your link is suspended.</TD></TR></TABLE>
yeah thats what happens when you post a picture here to try to help someone; the punk asses on this website, get a hold of it and hyper-link it all over the world, runs up the bandwidth overcharge really quick.
It's getting to the point that trying to help people is not worth the effort.

The-Kid 08-24-2006 09:19 AM

Re: (JimBlake)
 
Yea exactly. I noticed that with a small rubber cap on it. Cool thanks JimBlake.

And thanks everyone else for helping me solve this question


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