James in order to bleed your master cylinder, you have to do what is called
a bench bleed,  This is a very annoying (but not too difficult) operation.
You must mount your MC in a vise on a bench (hence the name) with it being
level.  you typically would get a bleeder kit and run a hose from the
line/lines coming out of the MC back into the reservoire.  After you have
adequately bled the MC then you simply (causing as small a mess as
possible) install it on your car.  This is what everything I have ever read
and/or heard says to do.  As for your other questions someone smarter than
I must tackle those for you.
Patrick Bowen
'79 Spit
At 02:50 PM 7/31/98 +0000, James wrote:
>I have a rair model car.  It's a 1500 with the single circuet master
>cylinder type, but there is a large plastic container on top instead of
>the normal aluminium.   So I got the kit for the aluminium type, because
>it contains the major rubber seals needed.  My one worry though is the
>seal for the MC to plastic container. 
>
>This can't be chainged, although not leaking I don't know wether it is
>likly too. 
>
>I am glad I got the new seal kit, the old ones the surface could be
>pealed off by hand.  The bore on the old one is realy good to I am glad
>at that.  
>
>The other problem is how the **** do I blead the MC once it's back
>together.  From the looks of it there is a space where air can collect
>because of it's angle. 
>
>-- 
>James Carpenter
>Yellow '79 spit wired by a trained marmot
>
 
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