My guess: the steel line, running from the splitter block to the wheel
cylinder, has been crushed shut. Has the car ever been put on a
flatbed hauler?
Follow it back from the wheel cyl, around the front of the axle and
across the top. If you feel a pinched-off/flat spot, you need to
replace that hard line. It's cheap, and only takes a few minutes to
bend to shape.
Matt
On May 23, 2005, at 9:01 AM, Randy Widman wrote:
> Hi Listers,
>
> I have been reading through the archives and haven't found the problem
> I am
> having. I replaced all (3) hoses, (the rear outer casing was
> completely split,
> the inner casing seemed okay). Anyway, I was able to bleed (3) of the
> brakes
> but on the right rear I can't get anything (air or fluid) to come out.
> The
> only other thing I did was replace that wheel's bleeder screw. I even
> took the
> entire bleeder screw out and tried to bleed the brake and nothing
> happened. It
> acts like there is something plugged up! When replacing the bleeder
> screw if I
> got a little greasy dirt that was around the hole accidentally pushed
> in the
> bleeder screw hole could that cause this problem? Looking for ideas.
>
> Thanks in Advance
>
> Randy Widman
> Red '79 B
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