My brakes were completely dead, front and back. Maybe the many times I had to turn it upside down to fix something didn't help, but most likely due to 18months it spent behind boxes at the back of my shed after we moved house was the main reason.
You just hold the bike in such a position that it's continuously uphill from the caliper to the brake reservoir and pump the lever a few times to restore the brake function.My brakes were completely dead, front and back. Maybe the many times I had to turn it upside down to fix something didn't help, but most likely due to 18months it spent behind boxes at the back of my shed after we moved house was the main reason.
The only way that can happen is if you had a fluid leak or your reservoir wasn't filled properly. Self bleeding doesn7work if the fluid level is below the hole where it goes through to the piston. That can happen when the reservoir isn't filled enough and you have an extreme horizontal angle of the reservoir that you can get on some handlebars.I tried that several times for quite a few minutes each time, I tapped and shook the cables - nothing!
The front brake is naturally directly below the lever, no high spots to trap bubbles. The back is more awkward. Even the 'simple' bleed (just a bowl on the lever bleed point) didn't work (I had a stand by then) , I had to inject from the caliper and it was full of bubbles.
Maybe Wisper keep the 705 cost down by not fitting self bleeding brakes: they are unbranded (unlike the derailleur and other parts) and Wisper actually have a video tutorial showing you how to bleed them.
There is no such thing as 'self bleeding brakes' its a complete fantasy.I tried that several times for quite a few minutes each time, I tapped and shook the cables - nothing!
The front brake is naturally directly below the lever, no high spots to trap bubbles. The back is more awkward. Even the 'simple' bleed (just a bowl on the lever bleed point) didn't work (I had a stand by then) , I had to inject from the caliper and it was full of bubbles.
Maybe Wisper keep the 705 cost down by not fitting self bleeding brakes: they are unbranded (unlike the derailleur and other parts) and Wisper actually have a video tutorial showing you how to bleed them.
You're starting to look a bit stupid. Do you think a world downhill champion uses the same type of brakes as a Wisper touring bike?There is no such thing as 'self bleeding brakes' its a complete fantasy.
Marshy will show you how. marshy is a professional bike mechanic with a manufacturer team and the bike mechanic for Greg Minnaar
'Pumping' the levers does not drive the air out, nor does it bring it to the master cylinder reservoir. To get the air out you must bleed them.
But according to 'someone' here Jason 'Marshy' Marsh is wrong, 4 time World cup DH champion Greg Minnaar is wrong, Team Santa Cruz is wrong, every professional bike team in the world along with their professional and certified mechanics are wrong, and only that 'someone' is right.
They've all been "Hoodwinked" you see
Brakes are really important,and its the only thing keeping you out a wheelchair or worse.
You mean the bit AFTER he's bled the brakes ?, flicking the lever ? As he says he's walking out the pads. I do that a lot, its called pumping up the brake.Finally, you van see him doing the self-bleeding at around 6:30.