You may find it easier to reverse bleed in these circumstances - make up a container with a sealed lid with two openings which can withstand a little pressure - I use a jam jar. one opening has a tube to the bottom, the other a bicycle tube valve.
Fill with fluid, then have a (preferably transparent) hose from the tube to the bleed nipple. Slightly pressurise the container with a bicycle pump and then open the bleed nipple. Make sure the reservoir does not overflow or the pressure container get empty. (A new oil syringe may help to remove fluid from the reservoir - do not reuse bleed fluid)
Other hints - for the brakes, back off all adjusters completely before starting. Use brake hose clamps to isolate where the problem is. Remember that you can bleed at any union, albeit this gets a bit messy. Clean up any fluid on paintwork immediately before it takes the paint off.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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