Barrabob wrote:went in for a set of rear pads at a shop and the kid cracked the bleed nipple without presure on the system i asume to push the piston in
If he really did that, he needs a crack himself, as in across the head.
What happened to the big flatblade screwdriver between the old pads and twist?
any ideas like undo the banjo at the slave and bleed there and then move down the line??
Prezactly. I've never done a brakeline or a master cylinder swap where I didn't have to crack the banjos at some stage. Air gets trapped somewhere between the bolt and the inner surface of the banjo chamber such that pressure in the system just pins it in place instead of flushing it upwards.
Solution, squeeze the lever, crack the banjo, let some fluid ooze out, then whack it back up tight and continue bleeding as normal. If still no go after a while, do the other banjo.
The main suspect usually seems to be the banjo at the master cylinder end.
Whenever I do this, I strip every shred of bodywork off the bike and park it in the opposite corner of the shed, under plastic, and I drape a wet cloth over the lower portion of the affected rim.