EScottH
Member
- Joined
- January 24, 2011
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- SW Florida
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1991 Eddie Bauer
OK...
The first repair I am making to my '91 Eddie Bauer is replacing the driver's side rear brake line which someone had installed too close to the manual brake cable and it rubbed through the brake line.
I bought a new length of brake line and used a pipe bender to route it around obstacles... I don't think I will have that problem any more
My question is this... should I just completely drain the brake system and bleed all the lines or just the one side? Can I get away with just this one side for now? I plan on replacing all the pads in the next few months and was going to replace the bleeder valves on all four points because they are looking pretty nasty.
Also, I am worried that I will need a special tool for cycling the ABS system valves and such if I bleed the whole system.
Any thoughts, advice, etc. on the brake system for this model?
Thanks,
Scott
The first repair I am making to my '91 Eddie Bauer is replacing the driver's side rear brake line which someone had installed too close to the manual brake cable and it rubbed through the brake line.
I bought a new length of brake line and used a pipe bender to route it around obstacles... I don't think I will have that problem any more

My question is this... should I just completely drain the brake system and bleed all the lines or just the one side? Can I get away with just this one side for now? I plan on replacing all the pads in the next few months and was going to replace the bleeder valves on all four points because they are looking pretty nasty.
Also, I am worried that I will need a special tool for cycling the ABS system valves and such if I bleed the whole system.
Any thoughts, advice, etc. on the brake system for this model?
Thanks,
Scott